Monday, March 28, 2022

Hebrews 11:30-31

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30 By faith the walls of Jericho fell down after they were encircled for seven days. 31 By faith the harlot Rahab did not perish with those who did not believe, when she had received the spies with peace. ~ Hebrews 11:30-31

Today we return to our study of Hebrews 11 where we have been considering the biblical definition of faith and what it looks like in our lives. Faith is "the confidence in what we hope for" and "the assurance in what we do not see." What we believe in is what we hope for and our faith gives hope a present reality, even though it may never come to fruition while we are on this earth. Due to the past demonstrations of God's faithfulness, faith is living in a hope that is so real it gives substance to the hope in the present. 

In v.30 of today's text we read, "By faith the walls of Jericho fell down after they were encircled for seven days."

In this verse we are positioned at the walls of Jericho, the entryway into the Promised Land. Here, the writer of Hebrews establishes a point that he has been hammering since he began this letter that salvation that gets us into heaven (justification) is by faith alone. He did this because Judaism had evolved to the point that its leaders taught that salvation is earned by our good behavior, and by the keeping of the Old Testament ceremonies and rituals. 

Today, we come to another real life illustration of faith in the God of the Bible. The aspect of faith that is being illustrated in today's passage is mature faith which is the type of faith that develops in our lives through the process of sanctification. Sanctification faith is different than justification faith. Justification faith gets us into heaven, whereas sanctification faith gets heaven into us now. Sanctification faith obeys God at all cost. It is mature to the point of demonstrating courage in the face of opposition, threat, and suffering. Mature faith does not draw back; it does not fold up; it does not collapse under pressure.

The wall of Jericho was massive and it surrounded the city of Jericho which, at the time of today's story, was tightly fortified. It was tightly fortified because this massive group of people, the Israelites, were advancing upon it and the people of the city were mortified. Israel was advancing upon Jericho because it had already been spied it out and the Lord had said, "I have given Jericho into your hand, but all the men of war must march around it once. And, do this each day for six days. And seven priests shall carry seven trumpets of rams’ horns before the ark; then on the seventh day you shall march around the city seven times, and the priests shall blow the trumpets. It shall be that when they make a long blast with the ram’s horn, and when you hear the sound of the trumpet, all the people shall shout with a great shout; and the wall of the city will fall down flat, and you shall overtake it."

To take Jericho seemed to be impossible, but once the people obeyed the voice of the LORD, it fell exactly as God said it would. Perhaps the Israelites felt a little embarrassed while the watchmen up on top of the wall watched them walk around and then leave six days in a row. It appeared ridiculous. It didn’t seem like a right approach at all, but they obeyed the word of God. The people of Israel had learned, while in the wilderness, not to disobey because the consequences were so severe. Mature faith produces the courage to believe God in impossible situations. So, with ridiculous orders and incredible promises, the people obeyed. And, the experience at Jericho has long been known to be an illustration of what happens when we follow God's commands, even though it may seem ridiculous at the moment.

In v.31 of today's text we read, "By faith the harlot Rahab did not perish with those who did not believe, when she had received the spies with peace."

Joshua sent two men as spies into the land because according to Deuteronomy 19 by the mouths of two witnesses the word of the Lord shall be established. When the two spies entered the city, they entered the house of a prostitute whose name was Rahab. Rahab was a Canaanite, but she believed in the God of the Bible. And, as a result of the condition of Rahab's heart toward God, He sent the two spies to her. Rahab hid the two spies thus she protected them from the men of the city who were hunting for them. Due to Rahab's actions, when the Lord gave Jericho to Israel, she and her father’s household and all she had was spared.

Historians tell us that the destruction of this Canaanite city and its culture created a great boon to the welfare of humanity because the Canaanites were so debased. But in the case of Rahab, she acknowledged faith in the true and living God. She believed and staked her life on the promises of the God of the Bible. She put herself in a dangerous position, hiding spies on her roof, and she ended up in the lineage of the Messiah.

Rahab had heard all the stories of how God worked among the Israelites who had fled Egypt. She concluded it made perfect sense to believe in the God of the Bible, and her faith grew quickly, so quickly she risked her life, her loved ones and her hotel. Her faith grew so rapidly, she was transformed from the house of shame to God's hall of fame. She went from someone who walked in the night to someone who walked in the light. I find it amazing that those who have the most outlandish faith come from contexts of the most outlandish lives.

Friday, March 25, 2022

Hebrews 11:27-29

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27 By faith he (Moses) forsook Egypt, not fearing the wrath of the king; for he endured as seeing Him who is invisible. 28 By faith he kept the Passover and the sprinkling of blood, lest he who destroyed the firstborn should touch them. 29 By faith they passed through the Red Sea as by dry land, whereas the Egyptians, attempting to do so, were drowned. ~ Hebrews 11:27-29

Today, we return to our study of the faith of Moses. As with all of the previous Old Testament people mentioned before the writer of Hebrews has written about, Moses provides a look at what faith in the God of the Bible looks like. Moses is mentioned 852 times in the Bible. He was one of two who appeared on the mount of transfiguration when Christ was shown to be greater than Moses and Elijah for He was the fulfillment of the Law and the Prophets of the Old Testament. 

In v.27 of today's passage we read, "By faith he (Moses) forsook Egypt, not fearing the wrath of the king; for he endured as seeing Him who is invisible."

Moses forsook all the treasures of Egypt because he knew his life was in the hands of the invisible and eternal God. The word "forsook" means a heart renunciation. Just like the disciples who followed the Lord Jesus, Moses refused to have the longings within him met with the temporary things of this world. He came to the place where he noticed the best of this world was not worthy enough to define him. After 40 years on the backside of the desert, shepherding his father's-in-law sheep, Moses came back to Pharaoh’s palace. This was quite a turn around after he tried to give God every reason in the book that he could not do what God was calling him to do.

This transformation came about as the result of being in the desert for forty years alone with God and sheep. During that time alone with God, Moses gained vision by the honing of his faith in the God of the Bible. Biblical faith enables us to develop vision which enables us to endure anything. Faith, or the heart's ability to see God, enables us to see Him more, and therefore, we draw conclusions that most do not. Jim Elliot once said, "He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain what he cannot lose." Self is always lost in the acquisition of vision and that is true freedom.

It was Dennis F. Kinlaw who once said, "Satan disguises submission to himself under the ruse of personal autonomy. The shift in commitment is never from Christ to evil; it is always from Christ to self. And instead of his will, self-interest now rules and what I want reigns. And that is the essence of sin."

Moses biggest enemy was not Satan or Pharaoh, it was trying to satisfy his God-given desires with the wrong things.  Moses was not defined by the pleasures of sin which is what tries to convince us that we are the god that we should serve. And, when we partake of sin, we will be more hollow within than we were before. But, when we partake of the Lord Jesus Christ, the Living Water, we discover a reality that most can not see.

So Moses went back to lead his people out of Egypt and he had no army. He had no weapons. And, he faced a proud monarch who reigned over the greatest empire in the world. And everyone in Egypt knew the story of this former prince. They knew he was guilty of murder. Moses had been gone for 40 years, and with the boldness he walked into the presence of Pharaoh and made his demands. Moses told Pharaoh he had better respond or it would not go well for he and his kingdom. And it didn’t take long before the plagues started coming. You see, our opportunity to grow in great faith comes on the heels of being driven to God through our trials in this life. The greater the degree of our pain, the greater the revelation of God to us.

In v.28 of today's passage we read, "By faith he kept the Passover and the sprinkling of blood, lest he who destroyed the firstborn should touch them."

The last plague was when the angel of death came and killed the firstborn in the houses of those who had no blood applied to their doorposts. Moses applied the blood to his doorpost because God was his definer. He didn’t try to make it on his own. He didn’t try to develop his own strategy. He accepted God’s will and was defined by God. This is what obedience looks like. And, of course, obedience is one of the products of faith.

In v.29 of today's passage we read, "By faith they passed through the Red Sea as by dry land, whereas the Egyptians, attempting to do so, were drowned."

Moses was enabled by God to lead as many as two million out of Egypt. This was a stunning act of faith. When the people came to the Red Sea, it looked bleak until God opened the Red Sea and the people walked through it on dry ground. And, that massive miracle came on the heels of the faith of a man who once trusted very little in the God of the Bible, but now had giant size faith. Moses had giant size faith because his trials served his faith in the God of the Bible, well. Biblical faith is armed by God’s word and God's promises and runs right into the raging battle. 

After God split the Red Sea, all two million of God's people walked through on dry land. And, when Pharaoh's entire army tried to follow, they were all drowned. The story of Moses is not the story of the Law, it is the story of faith, the type of faith that chooses to follow the plan that the God of the Bible has laid out for us. The type of faith that is bold to move ahead in confidence of the God of the promises. This kind of faith is a gift of God. This is the kind of faith says "no" to sin and says "yes" to this wonderful God who is far from being anything but faithful and trustworthy. 

Thursday, March 24, 2022

Hebrews 11:23-26

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23 By faith Moses, when he was born, was hidden three months by his parents, because they saw he was a beautiful child; and they were not afraid of the king’s command. 24 By faith Moses, when he became of age, refused to be called the son of Pharaoh’s daughter, 25 choosing rather to suffer affliction with the people of God than to enjoy the passing pleasures of sin, 26 esteeming the reproach of Christ greater riches than the treasures in Egypt; for he looked to the reward. ~ Hebrews 11:23-26

Today, we continue our study of biblical faith in Hebrews 11. Having consider several from the Old Testament, today we turn our attention to Moses whom God specifically chose to lead the Israelites from captivity in Egypt to salvation in the Promised Land. Moses was also the mediator of the Old Covenant and is commonly referred to as the giver of the Law.

The unknown writer of this letter wrote to a group of young Hebrew Christians who had come to recognize the Lord Jesus as the long promised Messiah of the Old Testament. They had left Judaism because it had developed into a system of works which taught that if one were good enough and moral enough, and observed all of the ceremonies and all the rituals, and did their part to keep the Law externally, and do all of the required things that the rabbis had added, they would be accepted by God. As they came to understand, it is impossible to earn the favor of God. If it were possible for any of us to measure up to acceptability before Him, He would be a very small god.

In v.23 of today's passage we read, "By faith Moses, when he was born, was hidden three months by his parents, because they saw he was a beautiful child; and they were not afraid of the king’s command."

Moses' life can be described in three forties, the first forty was spent growing up in Egyptian luxury, the second forty he shepherded another man's sheep on the backside of the wilderness, and the last forty was spent leading the Israelites out of Egypt. D.L. Moody once said, "Moses spent forty years thinking he was somebody; forty years learning he was nobody; and forty years discovering what God can do with a nobody."

The providence of God is when God uses the events of our lives to miraculously bring about His will in and through our lives. Such was the case for Moses. The Jews had become so innumerable in Egypt that Pharaoh issued a decree to have all the Hebrew male newborns thrown into the Nile river. But, God spared the life of Moses for obvious reason. The word "beautiful" indicates God gave Moses outstanding physical features that served him in the various callings God made on his life. This illustrates: Where God guides, He will provide.

In v.24 of today's passage we read, "By faith Moses, when he became of age, refused to be called the son of Pharaoh’s daughter."

Moses weighed the wealth of Egypt and the prestige of royalty against the satisfaction of knowing the living God and being His instrument in the lives of his people. He without hesitation Moses chose God’s will because he looked beyond the visible and saw the invisible. He saw God at work and, because of that, Moses became the man, more than any other man in recorded history, who saw God doing things and learned to know God most intimately. Faith in the God of the Bible rejects this world’s prestige.

Moses, by the providence of God, had been put in a basket covered with pitch and set in the Nile River to float away. His mother did that because there was a decree to kill all of the Hebrew babies. And so, in order to save his life, they simply let him float away, cared only for by the providence of God. Had he been one of the Hebrew babies to be killed by Pharaoh, there would have been no story of Moses. 

As a baby, Moses floated down the river, and, just so happened to be discovered by the daughter of Pharaoh who claimed him as her son. Amazingly, for the first twelve years of Moses life, the most impressionable years of his life, Moses was raised miraculously by his mother. The daughter of Pharaoh needed someone to nurse the baby and that nursing led to twelve years in the home of his biological parents.

With the formal education in Egypt, Moses learned hieroglyphics and hieratic scripts. He no doubt copied the texts that were part of his formal education. And, while doing that he learned the languages of surrounding nations. All of this was used of the Lord to use Moses to write much of the Old Testament.

In v.25 of today's passage we read, "choosing rather to suffer affliction with the people of God than to enjoy the passing pleasures of sin."

The way the writer of Hebrews lays out the faith of Moses shows how His faith acted. Moses made a series of choices. In fact, the word "choosing" reveals his life was marked by choices related to his faith in the God of the Bible. This word used by the writer of Hebrews translated "choosing" reveals Moses made a judgment. It was not a rash conclusion, he made it after much contemplation. And, his choice did not render the easiest path for Moses.

Choice is the hinge of destiny. We make choices and our choices make us. For forty years Moses knew luxury and ease, and then, he chose the will of God for his life. And, the will of God often includes little luxury and disease while we live on this earth.

When we choose God's will, we are enabled to see the temporary nature of this world's pleasures. The will of God for our lives also enables us to see that which is most substantive in this life. Moses chose to suffer which led him to a biblical family. It was in that context that Moses learned the deeper truths of God. It is in the context of a family that our greatest needs are met. The two essential elements of family, marriage and parenthood, reveal God’s character like nothing else in Creation. The love between a husband and wife provides a glimpse of Christ’s passionate devotion to us as His bride. In the same way, the ups and downs of parenthood offer a compelling picture of God’s tenderness and patience toward us as His children. And family provides a safe place where children can experience God’s love through the parents and learn how to love other people.

In v.26 of today's passage we read, "esteeming the reproach of Christ greater riches than the treasures in Egypt; for he looked to the reward."

Clearly, Moses is the picture of one who demonstrates that salvation comes not by works or ritual, but by faith in the God of the Bible. Moses was granted personal belief in the living God, and he built upon his belief through many trials in his 120 years on this earth. Moses choices' enabled him to see what others could not see. As a result, Moses had vision. 

Moses endured reproach that was similar to that which Christ endured, although he didn’t know about Christ and didn’t know Christ, he just knew that there was the promise of the coming Deliverer. But we know, and the readers of Hebrews know that he was willing to take a reproach to move from having everything to basically having nothing, from being honored, to being treated with scorn and disdain, as was Christ. Like the Lord Jesus, Moses was rich but he chose to become poor for the sake of others.

Wednesday, March 23, 2022

Hebrews 11:22

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By faith Joseph, when he was dying, made mention of the departure of the children of Israel, and gave instructions concerning his bones. ~ Hebrews 11:22

Today we return to Hebrews 11, the one chapter in the Bible where God gives us multiple examples of what it looks like to walk with Him by faith. Today, we consider the life of Joseph who was loved and favored by his father, Jacob. Of the 50 chapters in the book of Genesis, one fourth or 13 chapters of the book of Genesis are devoted to the life of Joseph.

Even though Joseph was younger than the rest of his 11 brothers, his dad gave him a coat of many colors which implied, "Joseph is my favorite." This created many problems between Joseph and his eleven brothers. And to add to that, God gave Joseph a dream that his brothers one day would bowed down to him. This resulted in Joseph's brothers hated him all the more.

One day, his father sent Joseph to check on his brothers as they cared for the family's flocks. Joseph's brothers took advantage of the opportunity as a caravan of Ishmaelites were passing by. So, they sold their little brother to the travelers who took him to Egypt where he ended up as a servant to Potiphar, an officer of Pharaoh. God favored Joseph, and Potiphar trusted him, but Potiphar's wife desired him, as well. Joseph was a man of integrity, so he fled from her, and she couldn't stand it, so she falsely accused him of attempted rape. Reluctantly, Potiphar had Joseph put into prison.

There, Joseph faithfully trusted the LORD. In fact, even though he was a prisoner himself, Joseph was put in charge of the prison. There, Joseph ran the prison with God's favor. It was a dream scenario for the keeper of the prison, who paid no attention to anything that was in Joseph's charge, because the LORD was with him.

One day, Joseph noticed the sad faces of two prisoners. Jospeh asked why they were so sad. This gracious gesture was the first step toward an open door for Joseph. The two sad-faced men told Joseph of their dreams which they did not understand. Both of them had been servants of Pharaoh. The first, a cupbearer, had a dream Joseph knew meant good news. In three days, the cupbearer would be restored to his previous position. The second man, the baker, would suffer punishment in three days. It was time for him to get right with God.

All came to pass as Joseph had predicted, but the cupbearer forgot Joseph, until years later when Pharaoh was plagued by two dreams. Joseph was called before Pharaoh, and he interpreted Pharaoh's dreams accurately. As a result, Pharaoh put Joseph in charge of the entire Egyptian kingdom.

The years went by, and Egypt prospered under the influence of Joseph. Famine eventually overcame the nations, resulting in the nations coming to Pharaoh for grain, which Joseph had wisely stored up during years of plenty. Soon, land was traded for grain, and Pharaoh's wealth and property expanded beyond his wildest dreams.

Then, one day, Joseph's brothers came to Egypt. Like everyone else, they were in search of grain. Joseph recognized his brothers, but they did not recognize him. Joseph then organized a way for them to confess their sins against him. This was a story of grace on Joseph's part, and the family was reunited. He told his brothers, "You meant it for evil, but God meant it for good."

Today's verse begins with "By faith Joseph," and, we can only imagine the many directions that sentence could have turned. By faith, Joseph believed the dreams God gave him. By faith, Joseph held onto his integrity in a foreign land when no one watched his life. By faith, Joseph loved God even when imprisoned. By faith, Joseph told Pharaoh double dreams are an indication God has guaranteed to perform His will. By faith, Joseph organized reconciliation and forgiveness in his family. By faith, Joseph saw how this gracious God had coordinated the events of his life.

Though Joseph had faith through all those events, the writer of Hebrews doesn't mention them. Instead, he wrote, "By faith Joseph, when he was dying, made mention of the departure of the children of Israel, and gave instructions concerning his bones."

According to Genesis 50, Joseph lived 110 years. The Israelites were still in Egypt, they were nomads, wanderers, and they had never possessed the land. While dying, Joseph made mention of the exodus of the sons of Israel and gave orders concerning his bones. While dying, he had not received the promise, and, it had been 200 years since the promise was first given to Abraham. Nobody had yet seen it. All of the patriarchs had died without seeing the promise from God come to fruition.

From a distance, Joseph foresaw the coming day when God would take his people out of Egypt. He knew they would go to the Promised Land that God had dedicated to Abraham generations earlier. Though he had not lived there, he believed his bones would go there. At the time of Joseph's death, the moment he ordered his family to bring his bones to the Promised Land, Israel was not a nation, but a family. And, they were in a good place, for Pharaoh favored them. In Egypt, they had been given good and peaceful land in which to prosper.

Joseph had no reason to wish for their future departure, for life was good in Egypt, and he had worked hard to make it so. But, still, Joseph knew, Israel would not be a small family with Egypt's favor forever. Eventually, 400 years later, they had to depart Egypt, despised by the Egyptians because God had grown them into a nation of people.

Joseph believed that God's will was the best for him and his family. Joseph saw how good he and his family had it in Egypt, but he believed the will of God was the best. And future generations, when they had it rough, would also need to believe in this God so much that they would be defined by Him. And, Joseph's bones preached that message for 400 years. His coffin delivered a one-point sermon: "God is faithful."

Joseph was a tremendous example of a man of faith in the God of the Bible. A key to his incredible adventure with God was his resolve to resist feeding the evil he knew to be in his heart. He didn't give into the potential anger toward his brothers or the temptation to give into the advances of Potiphar's wife. His whole life was totally built around the God of the Bible who gave to Abraham this incredible promise that is yet to come to pass. And everything in his life focused on the confidence he had in the God of the Bible, that He would do what He said He would do because He could be trusted. This is what biblical faith looks like.

Tuesday, March 22, 2022

Hebrews 11:20-21

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20 By faith Isaac blessed Jacob and Esau in regard to their future. 21 By faith Jacob, when he was dying, blessed each of Joseph’s sons, and worshiped as he leaned on the top of his staff. ~ Hebrews 11:20-21

We return today to our study of Hebrews 11 wherein the writer of Hebrews has giving us a precise definition of faith in the God of the Bible. As we have been considering, faith is "the confidence in what we hope for" and "the assurance in what we do not see."   

In v.20 of today's passage we read, "By faith Isaac blessed Jacob and Esau in regard to their future."

The book of Hebrews was written to Jewish Christians who were familiar with the detailed story of Isaac and Jacob and Esau. Isaac, being very aware of his coming death, blessed Jacob and Esau. Biblical faith faces its greatest test in the hour of death when one has not experienced the fulfillment of the promise God has given. And, all of the patriarchs of Israel died not having received the multilayered promise that God initially gave to Abraham. Yet, all of them died in the confidence that the promise would be fulfilled even though they had not yet received it. 

The key phrase here in Hebrews 11:20 is "in regard to their future." Even though Abraham had not received the fulfillment of the promise, he reiterated it to his son, Isaac, who did not receive the fulfillment of the promise, either. Abraham had been promised the land, the nation, and the spiritual blessings to the world. He never saw any of it at all. Yet, he didn’t die in despair. No, Abraham died in faith, confidently passing on the promise to his son, Isaac, knowing Isaac would be the next step in the divine plan that would lead ultimately to the fulfillment of the promise. And, Isaac did the same thing, he passed the promise on to his son, Jacob. 

Isaac blessed both Esau and Jacob but Esau did not walk with God. The promise that God gave to the patriarchs is a promise of blessing which rooted in their confidence in God’s covenantal faithfulness. Though the patriarchs did not enter the land, and though they did not see the nation established, and though they did not see the nations of the world blessed, they fully expected God to keep His promise. The worth of their faith was discovered in the faithfulness of their God.

In v.21 of today's passage we read, "By faith Jacob, when he was dying, blessed each of Joseph’s sons, and worshiped as he leaned on the top of his staff."

Even though Jacob had his struggles in his walk with the God of the the Bible, he never stopped trusting Him. Jacob had to walk by faith in the God of the Bible because he encountered many struggles and challenges, and the victories came very hard for him. The fog in his life was thick, sin was heavy, but his faith never waned. The story of Jacob as recorded in Genesis alternates between calling him "Israel" which means "prince with God" and "Jacob" which means "deceiver." Like you and me, he had his good and bad days. Yet, fundamentally, he remained faithful because He knew that God is faithful.

Interestingly, in today's passage, the Holy Spirit selected a minute fragment of Jacob’s life with which to illustrate his faith in Him. No mention is made of all the amazing events which took place in Jacob's earlier life. The one point upon which our attention is focused is that of Jacob dying, blessing, worshipping, and leaning! The one minute fragment of Jacob’s life with which to illustrate his faith in God is discovered in the last few words of v.21: "Jacob leaned on the top of his staff." 

Jacob's staff had become necessary to him, because his hip had been dislocated in the wrestling match he had with God in Genesis 32 when God changed his name from Jacob to Israel. Leaning upon that staff, Jacob would always remember the miracle that God had wrought in his life, in breaking his stubborn self-will. When Jacob leaned upon his staff he was reminded of his helpless, moment-by-moment dependency upon his God. Jacob worshipped God as the result of becoming a broken man.

Jacob's staff was not just a simple rod, it was a rod with a short crossbeam. Through the many years it has developed into what we use today to make qualitative judgements of the height and angle of an object relative to the user of the staff. Such is the case with our faith in the God of the Bible. 

Interestingly, Jacob's staff points us to another cross, the cross of the Lord Jesus Christ. It is only through His cross that any of us have an operative faith in the God of the Bible who made a promise to Abraham that he would be the father of so many the stars of the heavens are an illustration of it. It is only through the cross that God opened the only way for our faith to be acceptable to Him. The message of the cross comes to us best on the heels of our brokenness or those moments that we are reminded that we need the Lord more than anything. This was Jacob's story for on the night he met God he thought his brother was coming to kill him. But, in the end, Jacob became an inheritance of God.

Monday, March 21, 2022

Hebrews 11:17-19

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17 By faith Abraham, when God tested him, offered Isaac as a sacrifice. He who had embraced the promises was about to sacrifice his one and only son, 18 even though God had said to him, “It is through Isaac that your offspring will be reckoned.” 19 Abraham reasoned that God could even raise the dead, and so in a manner of speaking he did receive Isaac back from death. ~ Hebrews 11:17-19

After yesterday's detour, the writer of Hebrews redirects our attention back to Abraham. Biblical faith is the subject of this chapter and Abraham’s faith provides proof of the validity of this biblical kind of faith. In today's verses Abraham encounters the most intense test of his faith in the God of the Bible. Today, we learn how God subtracts in order to multiply. 

In v.17 of today's passage we read, "By faith Abraham, when God tested him, offered Isaac as a sacrifice. He who had embraced the promises was about to sacrifice his one and only son."

In Genesis 22, we are given the story of how God called Abraham to go up to the top of Mount Moriah and place his only son, Isaac, on the altar. This was to be a test from God for the development of Abraham's faith. You see, our faith does not grow without the trials of life. The real issue was in the life of Abraham was whom he loved most. Interestingly, the first time the word "love" appears in the Bible is in Genesis 22. Also, the first time the word "worship" appears in the Bible is here in Genesis 22. What we love we worship, and, what we worship we love.

Unsaved man's wisdom considers trials to be that which we should avoid and they do not consider trails to be useful tools in the hands of God to deepen our heart's ability to see Him. Unsaved man's wisdom looks at the now and so minimizes the values of God like faith, faithfulness, patience, steadfastness, endurance and intimacy with Him. 

Abraham knew about the culture of God, and he understood the necessity of sacrifice for sin. He knew and understood he was sinful and that he was in need of a sacrifice for his sin. But Isaac was the heir through whom all the promises would be fulfilled. Abraham had built altars and had sacrificed animals many times before. But this was different, much different. Yet, Abraham led his son up that mountain fully prepared to go through with the task God had called him to that day. Isaac carried his own wood, as it were, kind of a picture of the Lord Jesus carrying His cross. Then Isaac asked his father about the whereabouts of the lamb for the burnt offering. They knew what Abel and Enoch knew. So, Abraham informed his 30 year old son that God would provide for Himself the lamb for the burnt offering. Abraham built an altar there, arranged the wood, bound his son and laid him on the altar on top of the wood. 

In v.18 of today's passage we read, "even though God had said to him, “It is through Isaac that your offspring will be reckoned."

All of Abraham's hopes and dreams were in Isaac. All the promises of God were in Isaac. Abraham loved Isaac, he had waited so long for him. Perhaps Abraham thought that he had sinned so terribly with Hagar that God had changed His mind. At the moment that Abraham had stretched out his hand to slay his son, God profoundly interrupted him.

Abraham also knew that God’s law forbad a man to kill his son, or to kill anybody for that matter. He also knew that God did not call for human sacrifice, so that sacrifice was always an animal. Abraham's trust was so great in the God of the Bible that he knew if God had to, He would raise Isaac from the dead.

In v.19 of today's passage we read, "Abraham reasoned that God could even raise the dead, and so in a manner of speaking he did receive Isaac back from death."

The word "test" used in Genesis 22:1 means to prove the worth. When God tests us, He is out to pull back the curtain to show us the proof His faithfulness in our lives. Faith is not blind or uneducated. When we pass the test, we are allowed to see that the success of our faith in nestled in the faithfulness of God. Isaac did not die that day on that mountain, but Abraham did. Abraham died to allowing his son to be more important to him than God. Abraham could do this due to the fact that he had seen God's faithfulness so many times before. And, in seeing God's faithfulness, Abraham had come to know God pretty intimately. Abraham knew without doubt that God could be thoroughly trusted. 

A boy was caught on the second floor of his family's home that was on fire. The father of the boy ran to save his son, but he could not get to the second floor of the home where the boy was. The fire raged. The father could faintly see his boy standing in the window seal of his bedroom. Due to all of the smoke the boy could not see his father. His father yelled, "Jump, son, jump!" The boy said, "But dad, I can't see you!" The dad then said, "Jump son I will catch you for I can see you." That day the boy demonstrated his faith in his father and his father demonstrated his faithfulness to catch his son.

Friday, March 18, 2022

Hebrews 11:13-16

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13 All these people were still living by faith when they died. They did not receive the things promised; they only saw them and welcomed them from a distance, admitting that they were foreigners and strangers on earth. 14 People who say such things show that they are looking for a country of their own. 15 If they had been thinking of the country they had left, they would have had opportunity to return. 16 Instead, they were longing for a better country—a heavenly one. Therefore God is not ashamed to be called their God, for he has prepared a city for them. ~ Hebrews 11:13-16

We return to our study of Hebrews 11 wherein we discover the nature and utter necessity of faith in the God of the Bible. At the beginning of this chapter the writer of Hebrews gave a twofold definition of faith: "the confidence in what we hope for" and "the assurance in what we do not see." Hebrews 11 is filled with examples of Godly men and women who "lived by faith" and here in today's text the writer of Hebrews takes us on a slight detour highlighting those who "died in faith." 

In v.13 of today's passage we read, "All these people were still living by faith when they died. They did not receive the things promised; they only saw them and welcomed them from a distance, admitting that they were foreigners and strangers on earth."

When  Abraham, Isaac and Jacob died, they were still believing in the God of the Bible and in the promise He had given to them. The Covenant promise that Abraham would be the Father of a multitude was never realized by him while he lived on this earth. This did not detour Abraham, he continued by walk in the confidence that God existed and was a rewarder of those who seek Him. As we are in this sinful world, the patriarchs were foreigners and strangers because they were defined by God's culture, as communicated in His Word. His culture is and will always be contrary to the cultures of this world because His culture is the truth.

The Apostle Peter reminds us that he and the other disciples did not follow cleverly devised myths but they were eyewitnesses of the majesty of the Lord Jesus. And, the Apostle John reminds us that he and the other disciples followed the Lord Jesus because He manifested eternal life before them. Through these and others God has given us His Word through which we are reminded that we are foreigners and strangers in this world. His word gives the absolutely correct definition to all things and His word can and must be trusted.

Biblical faith reminds us of a greater future hope that often we see from a distance. It is this faith in the God of the Bible that reminds us that nothing in this world will satisfy us and we must be careful to avoid the lie that it will. When we begin to believe the lie that this world can satisfy us, we are positioned to have our hearts captured by the enemy of our souls. Living as foreigners and strangers in this world frees us to enjoy the father heart of God and His culture instead of being enslaved by chasing the empty promises of this world. It is quite helpful to remember that this world is under the control of Satan himself, and he is not out to lead us to wholesomeness.

In v.14 of today's passage we read, "People who say such things show that they are looking for a country of their own."

The patriarchs and all who choose to live by faith in the God of the Bible are tendered to be foreigners and strangers in this world which is being run by the evil one. Through the way the patriarchs lived their lives, they made it clear that they belonged to another place in a different dimension. This is the story of all who have believed on the Lord Jesus as our Savior. Our longing for God's country began the day we trusted Christ as our Savior, and it has grown with intensity as we have come to know our Savior's heart for us. Faith in the God of the Bible is patient to endure the lack of fulfillment in this life because it has its focus on the promise that lies ahead. 

Hebrews 11:14 ends with the word "own" which literally means "fatherland." Once our hearts were captured by our Father in heaven, we have never looked back. God reveals Himself in the Bible as a gentle, forgiving Father, intimately involved with each and every detail of our lives. It is not only a beautiful picture, but a true one. However, every person seems to have a different idea of what our Father in heaven is like, because they unconsciously tend to attach the feelings and impressions that they have of their own earthly father to their concept of their Heavenly Father. Each person's own experience with human authority is usually transferred over to how they relate to God. Good experiences bring us closer to knowing and understanding God, just as bad experiences create distorted pictures of our Father's love for us.

There is one attribute of our Heavenly Father that not even the best parent can hope to imitate, that is His ability to be with us all the time. As parents, we cannot give constant attention 24 hours a day. We are finite beings who can only focus on one thing at a time. Not only is our Father with us all the time, but He gives us His whole attention. Our Heavenly Father is constantly thinking an uninterrupted stream of loving thoughts toward us as though nobody else in the world exists. 

In v.15 of today's passage we read, "If they had been thinking of the country they had left, they would have had opportunity to return."

So bright was the promise of God, so trustworthy was His Word that the patriarchs anchored their endurance and their perseverance in the future and this gave them a positive faith to endure anything. This was all made possible by the Lord Jesus Christ who left the perfect fatherland in heaven, and willingly became a foreigner and a stranger while on this earth, so that our hearts could be captured by the father heart of God. In fact, the Lord Jesus took upon Himself the punishment of God for our sin. As a result, the Lord Jesus has given us His perfection that we do not have to face God as our judge anymore. When the Lord Jesus began His ministry He began to speak to weary foreigners and strangers, like you and me with the language of forgiveness and acceptance. It was He who presented to us the father heart of God.

In v.16 of today's passage we read, "Instead, they were longing for a better country—a heavenly one. Therefore God is not ashamed to be called their God, for he has prepared a city for them."

The longing of the believer for an eternity with God invites the favor of God through the Lord Jesus Christ. In Hebrews 2:11 we read, "Both the one who makes people holy and those who are made holy are of the same family. So Jesus is not ashamed to call them brothers and sisters." In order for God to not be ashamed to be called the believer's God, the Lord Jesus had to go to the cross to destroy the work of the devil. And, for all who choose to believe in the Lord Jesus and invite Him into their lives to be their Savior, He is not ashamed to call them His brothers and sisters.

Thursday, March 17, 2022

Hebrews 11:11-12

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11 And by faith even Sarah, who was past childbearing age, was enabled to bear children because she considered him faithful who had made the promise. 12 And so from this one man, and he as good as dead, came descendants as numerous as the stars in the sky and as countless as the sand on the seashore. ~ Hebrews 11:11-12

Today, we continue our study of the book of Hebrews wherein faith in the God of the Bible is the paramount subject. As we have pointed out before "faith is confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see." These two elements make up the belief and trust in the God of the Bible that provides the assurance of the fulfillment of God’s promises. This faith is bolstered by the many promises that God has given and has already fulfilled.

After giving us the definition for biblical faith at the beginning of this chapter, the writer of Hebrews then commences to highlight the lives of Old Testament saints who lived by faith in the God of the Bible. Having considered Abel, Enoch and Noah, the writer of Hebrews has turned our attention toward Abraham. And, today, we return to the example of Abraham whom we considered a little in our last study.

In v.11 of today's passage we read, "And by faith even Sarah, who was past childbearing age, was enabled to bear children because she considered him faithful who had made the promise."

Abraham and Sarah were 90 and 100 years of age, yet they conceived and gave birth to a son. A total impossibility, humanly speaking, but God masters the impossible. And, this life of faith that God calls His people to demands a break with everything that is familiar in our lives. It also demands a break from everything that is old, as well. It starts with a willingness to separate from everything that is familiar and visible. This is where every Christian’s pilgrimage begins, when we choose to separate ourselves from our dependence upon everything in this world that we have always been defined by.

Biblical faith is transformative, and, the more we exercise it, the greater the transformation we will realize in our yielded lives. We see this transformation here with Abraham and Sarah as it became evident that Sarah was with child. Abraham is a man of faith who separated himself from the world to go toward an inheritance which God promised but which Abraham would not see or inherit until a future that was at that point unknown to him. 

We can also see this great transformation in Abraham when he offered up his son Isaac to God on Mount Moriah. His reason could see no solution to his predicament. God had promised, "Through your son, Isaac, your descendants will be named." And now, God was telling him to sacrifice Isaac. Reason could never figure that out, but Abraham was not walking by reason, he was learning to walk by faith. He believed that God's promise would prevail. He believed God would raise Isaac from the dead, if need be, to fulfill His promise. As a result we have this amazing account of how Abraham, as it were, received Isaac back from the dead, for in Abraham's mind he was as good as dead. Abraham's faith triumphed and God gave him back his son, Isaac.

In v.12 of today's passage we read, "And so from this one man, and he as good as dead, came descendants as numerous as the stars in the sky and as countless as the sand on the seashore. "

When God gave to Abraham this promise, God turned his attention to the stars of the sky and the sands of the sea and reiterated the promise to Abraham. God had to do this because Abraham was 75 years old when he first received the promise. And, when God used the stars of the sky and the sands of the sea to illustrate His promise to Abraham, Abraham was 86 years old. So, for 11 years Abraham and Sarah waited, sometimes patiently. 

Interestingly, at the age of 99, God changed Abrams name to Abraham. Abram means "exalted father" while Abraham means "father of a multitude." In addition, God changed Sarai's name to Sarah. Sarai means "my princess," while Sarah means "mother of a ruler of nations." God added "ha" to Abram and He added "ah" to Sarai. God gave to both Abram and Sarai a portion of His name. Their name change signified a new birth experience for both Abram and Sari. Their previous behavior of lying, deceitfulness and cowardice as revealed in the birth of Ishmael is not the behavior of one following God. The addition of God's name signifies new life.

Take a breath and breathe it out. In sadness, we breathe heavy sighs. In joy, our lungs feel almost like they will burst. In fear we hold our breath and have to be told to breathe slowly to help us calm down. When we’re about to do something hard, we take a deep breath to find our courage. When a baby is born, he takes his first breath. In so doing, the baby speaks the name of God. Breathing, therefore, is akin to praying. When Moses asked God His name, God said, "YHWH," which represents breathing sounds. The name of God is the sound of breathing. How generous of God to choose to give Himself a name that we can’t help but speak every moment of our lives. 

The point of giving Sarai and Abram a part of His name was a subtle reminder that YHWH was the secret behind their success. The same is true for you and me. Biblical faith is the ignition switch to spiritual power that makes us useful and allows God through us to do His work in this world. The emphasis in the Scriptures in not on what man does for God in this world, the emphasis is on what God does for man and through the man of faith. God releases power to do what seems to be impossible.

Wednesday, March 16, 2022

Hebrews 11:8-10

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8 By faith Abraham, when called to go to a place he would later receive as his inheritance, obeyed and went, even though he did not know where he was going. 9 By faith he made his home in the promised land like a stranger in a foreign country; he lived in tents, as did Isaac and Jacob, who were heirs with him of the same promise. 10 For he was looking forward to the city with foundations, whose architect and builder is God. ~ Hebrews 11:8-10

Today, we return to our study of Hebrews 11 where the writer of Hebrews is illustrating faith by recounting certain aspects of some of the lives of Old Testament believers. There are really only two ways to live our lives on this old earth. One is to live by sight and base everything on what we can experience empirically. The other is to live by faith and base everything on what God is doing in our lives. Which approach has the better track record, man's ability to live empirically or the abilities of the God of the Bible? Having consider Abel, Enoch and Noah, today we consider Abraham.

In v.8 of our text today we read, "By faith Abraham, when called to go to a place he would later receive as his inheritance, obeyed and went, even though he did not know where he was going."

Abraham was a man who left home without a road map. When his story begins, he lived in a place called Ur where the people were polytheistic. And, the main God of the people of Ur was the God of the moon. It was good that God called Abraham out of that context. In fact, God called him out because Abraham knew there was much more to this life than the many gods of his people who had fashioned them by their understanding. And, Abraham did not know where he was going, but God did. Not knowing where we are going is always better than going in the wrong direction.

Abraham was righteous because he was a man of faith in the God who he was yet to know, and God imputed righteousness to him because of his faith. Abraham was declared righteous because of the faith he demonstrated in the God of the Bible. And all through his life, Abraham acted on his faith. Abraham is therefore the pattern of faith in the God of the Bible. The extent to which we enjoy our new life will always be determined by how much we leave our old lives.

The writer of Hebrews wrote this book to call these young Hebrew Christians to leave the old covenant and all of the religious trappings of Judaism. He did this because the Jews had turned Judaism into a legalistic religion. In fact, by the time of the writing of this book, the Rabbis were teaching that Abraham was righteous due to his good behavior. This is why the writer of Hebrews established that even Abraham was justified only by His faith in God.

In v.9 of today's passage we read, "By faith he made his home in the promised land like a stranger in a foreign country; he lived in tents, as did Isaac and Jacob, who were heirs with him of the same promise."

When Abraham obeyed God and went to the land of promise, he never got the promise. In all of Abraham’s life in the land, he never owned the land. During the whole time Abraham was in the promised land, he was "a stranger in a foreign country." The writer of Hebrews used a Greek word here translated "stranger" which means one who doesn’t even have the rights of a citizen. He was a foreigner in the land, and he is the perfect picture of the believer in the God of the Bible. This world is not our home, we are just passing through.

Faith dares us to pay no attention to the impossible. The man who is not walking by faith in the God of the Bible, one who operates on his reason alone, invariably misinterprets the evidence incorrectly. The cause of this was the Fall of Man in the Garden of Eden. When Man refused to be defined by God, he forfeited his ability to see and to discern correctly. Man has been separated from the eternal dimension as a result of his rebellion. And, faith in the God of the Bible is the absolute ingredient if we ever expect to have God to solve our problems. The emphasis in the Bible is not on what we do for God, but what God is doing for us.

Now, the revelation of God centers in Jesus Christ, therefore, the life of faith begins by an acceptance of Him as our Savior. Faith, as we have already seen, is a desire for something better and it starts with hope. Then it is an awareness of the unseen God who is nevertheless very real. Then faith involves an assurance resulting in obedience that the Unseen One will bring us to the something better. Without faith, life is a blind march into mystery. The future is an imponderable enigma to those without faith in the God of the Bible. Therefore there will always be a sense of anxiety in them in trying to look ahead without God.

Biblical faith believes that God has revealed something about the future. And what He has revealed is quite enough for us to know. Faith seizes upon a revealed event and begins to live in anticipation of it. As a result, faith makes exciting the mystery, and it gives life purpose and destination. Abraham obeyed God and went to a foreign land, really not knowing where he was going. And, God led him. The reason Abraham did this is explain in the next verse.

In v.10 of today's passage we read, "For he was looking forward to the city with foundations, whose architect and builder is God."

It is amazing how far ahead Abraham could see. Abraham lived about two thousand years before Christ and he looked forward by faith, believing what God had said would take place. He looked across these forty centuries of time and beyond to the day when God would bring to pass on earth a city with eternal foundations. Biblical faith believes in permanence. And, Abraham saw what John saw in the book of Revelation, a city coming down out of heaven onto the new earth. Faith anticipates the fulfillment of the promise, and, Abraham was patient because he knew where he was going. Those who really live by faith in the God of the Bible are patient people. Abraham hung in there and waited till God did all things in His own time. 

God is the best architect not only of the city that is to come, He is the best architect of our lives. Necessary for the promise of God to Abraham that he would have an heir was a son. And, God turned a nursing home into a maternity ward. Just when it looked hopeless, God miraculously made it possible for a 90 year old woman and a 100 year old man to conceive a baby. 

Tuesday, March 15, 2022

Hebrew 11:3-7

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3 By faith we understand that the universe was formed at God’s command, so that what is seen was not made out of what was visible. 4 By faith Abel brought God a better offering than Cain did. By faith he was commended as righteous, when God spoke well of his offerings. And by faith Abel still speaks, even though he is dead. 5 By faith Enoch was taken from this life, so that he did not experience death: “He could not be found, because God had taken him away.” For before he was taken, he was commended as one who pleased God. 6 And without faith it is impossible to please God, because anyone who comes to him must believe that he exists and that he rewards those who earnestly seek him. 7 By faith Noah, when warned about things not yet seen, in holy fear built an ark to save his family. By his faith he condemned the world and became heir of the righteousness that is in keeping with faith. ~ Hebrews 11:3-7

Today, we come back to our study of Hebrews 11 where we are given an outstanding definition of faith which has two inseparable parts. The first is "what we hope for" and the second is "the assurance in what we do not see." 

Faith is "what we hope for." 

Our faith in the God of the Bible is what we hope for and our faith gives substance to that which we hope for the present time. Faith starts with a sense of dissatisfaction with the way things are now, and faith causes us to long for that which God has promised in advance. 

Faith also is the "assurance in what we do not see." 

The word "assurance" means the conviction that the unseen exists. Assurance is banking our lives on our hope in the promises of the God of the Bible. Biblical faith in the God of the Bible actualizes the truth for the future and commits to that actualization. And, it makes sense to do so given the history of the God of the Bible with the people of Israel. A careful reading of the Old Testament blows away the idea that faith is blind and is not based on fact.

As we come back into Hebrews 11, we are given several examples of people who lived by faith. Today, we will consider three of these examples: Abel, Enoch and Noah. As we will see, Abel illustrates worshipping faith. Enoch is the example of walking with God kind of faith. And, Noah is the example of working kind of faith.

Before we get to these three, let's consider v.3 of today's text which reads, "By faith we understand that the universe was formed at God’s command, so that what is seen was not made out of what was visible."

Biblical faith values understanding more than sight, and it puts us immediately in touch with reality. When we trust our sight more than God's understanding, we have perched ourselves on the throne of God. Faith in the God of the Bible enables us to be patient with our reason to catch up to what God has promised and performed. Faith deals with facts but it also helps us to see reality before the facts arrive on the scene.

For example, science cannot tell us how human history is going to end, but by faith we know how it will end because God has already told us in His word. This is why faith pleases God, because it comes to grips with reality and God is the ultimate reality. Those who trust Him and His word, all the while ignoring the mocking taunts of those who think they know better, will enjoy for time and eternity the favor of the One who is best trusted with our hearts and our lives.

Now, let us look at the first three examples given in v.4-7 of today's passage. In v.4 of today's passage we read, "By faith Abel brought God a better offering than Cain did. By faith he was commended as righteous, when God spoke well of his offerings. And by faith Abel still speaks, even though he is dead."

The world's first brothers were Cain and Abel, the first sons of Adam and Eve. They lived when the world was young, when everything was much different than it is today. Yet, though they enjoyed a life less hectic than we, they longed for something better, they hungered after God. This explain why they one day went to God with their own sacrifices. Their lives illustrate the fact that we will never be satisfied without God. And, that which we worship most is that which defines us most.

Abel worshipped the God of the Bible when he brought his sacrifice to God, but Cain chose not to worship God because his sacrifice did not fall in line with God's definition of how it should have been offered. God had required that the sacrifice had to involve the blood of an innocent animal. We cannot have God's ability until we are prepared to recognize the poverty of our own. That is what a blood sacrifice teaches. There must be a life laid down before one can have the life of God. We cannot have God's ability for our problems until we are first ready to lay aside any dependence upon our own. And, Abel was the first man to learn this truth, and we do well to follow his example of worship.

In v.5 of today's passage we read, "By faith Enoch was taken from this life, so that he did not experience death: “He could not be found, because God had taken him away.” For before he was taken, he was commended as one who pleased God."

Enoch was the seventh man from Adam and he is the first human after the Fall who is said to walk with God. At 65 years of age, Enoch began for the first time to enjoy the continuous presence of the unseen God of the Bible, and he related his life daily to Him. In doing so, Enoch found a fellowship that death could not interrupt. Enoch never died. God took him to heaven before he physically died. He was one of two men in the Bible of whom it is recorded that they never died physically, Elijah was the other. 

The phrase "he was commended as one who pleased God" has to do with receiving approval. God approves of us when we operate on faith, when we lack the ability to make sense of a situation and we rely on the Lord to work things out. And, when we believe in Him we will walk with Him, we will operate believing He is our companion who actually guides us through life.

In v.6 of today's passage we read, "And without faith it is impossible to please God, because anyone who comes to him must believe that he exists and that he rewards those who earnestly seek him."

Pleasing to God kind of faith believes that He exists and He rewards those who seek Him diligently. This kind of faith moves us to come to God on a regular basis. We do not go to any special place, no, we come to Him in our hearts as we live our lives. As we make decisions, we reference the Lord before we do so. When pleasing God becomes the determining factor for our decisions in life, life becomes easier. When we seek Him first, all other things in this life will be added unto us.

In v.7 of today's passage we read, "By faith Noah, when warned about things not yet seen, in holy fear built an ark to save his family. By his faith he condemned the world and became heir of the righteousness that is in keeping with faith."

Noah believed God when God told him that it would rain even though Noah had never seen rain. And, Noah believed God so much that for the next 120 years he worked at building a very large floatation device. Through the ridicule of all of his friends and acquaintances, Noah believed and worked on that Ark. He did this because God told him what would happen in the future, even though it did not make sense to Noah in the present.

To be able to bank our lives on someone who is invisible looks like the most preposterous thing imaginable to those who do not. The unsaved cannot comprehend this kind of spiritual faith because the Holy Spirit has not awakened them to the God of the Bible. All people live by faith, the difference is the object of our faith. We all ride in cars that cross over man-made bridges and we all ingest foods and medicines believing they are good for us. But, even though all people have natural faith, we don’t all have the ability to perceive God because believing in the God of the Bible is a spiritual kind of faith. Stay tuned tomorrow as we consider a few more of those who demonstrate what it looks like to believe in the God of the Bible.

Monday, March 14, 2022

Hebrews 11:1-2

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1 Now faith is confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see. 2 This is what the ancients were commended for. ~ Hebrews 11:1-2

In Hebrews 1-10, the writer has labored to prove that the New Covenant ratified in the blood of God is in every way superior to the Old Covenant. Four times to this point in the book of Hebrews, the writer has warned these young Hebrew believers not to go back to the religion that had been twisted by man into a works system. The problem with Judaism developed over time because the Jews had added all kinds of human rules to it resulting in a legalistic religion. It had lost the purity and vulnerability of faith in the God of the Bible, and, it became a system of ethics which taught salvation by works.

In v.1-2 of today's passage we read, "Now faith is confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see. 2 This is what the ancients were commended for."

Faith is "confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see." This sentence includes two aspects of faith that are indivisible. The word "faith" means belief, trust, or confidence. It is the substance of "what we hope for." That which we believe in is what we hope for and our faith gives it a present substance. And, when we live by faith, we will be looked upon by others as different because of God's definition of things. Henry David Thoreau, once said, "If I seem to walk out of step with others, it is because I am listening to another drum beat."

In Old Testament days there were many who had nothing but the promises of God to rest upon. God had told them there was coming a Messiah. They knew there was coming One who would finally take away sin. Many of those Old Testament believers believed this promise but they never saw it come to pass here on earth. Yet, they hoped for it. And, that is what faith is, it is living in a hope that is so real it gives substance to the hope in the present. Faith is not positive thinking nor is it a hunch to be followed. Faith is not hoping for the best, hoping that everything will turn out all right in the end. Faith is not even a feeling of optimism. 

Faith commences with "what we hope for." It starts with a sense of discontent. We can never have much faith unless we are dissatisfied with the way we are now, and are longing for something better. If we do not feel dissatisfied with the way we are, it will be impossible for us to exercise much faith in God. This is why, all through the Bible, the great enemy of faith is complacency. 

The promises that came to the Old Testament people were so real that even though they never saw them, they based their lives on them, sight unseen. Our faith is only as good as its object. All of the Old Testament promises related to the future, but the people acted as if they were in the present. They simply took God at His word and lived on the basis of His promises. They had reason to due to His track record. They had seen His promises come to fruition. They were people of faith, and faith gave substance to what was yet in their future.

So, faith in the God of the Bible is not sort of a wishful, longing, that something’s going to come to fruition. Faith is an absolute, utter certainty, and, it defies everything that is normal. Biblical hope is the belief and trust in the God of the Bible whose ways are contrary to this world's normal way of thinking. I must admit it is different to follow the culture of this God I’ve never seen with my eyes or heard with my ears. But, this is the nature of faith, to believe before we see.

Faith is rejecting our senses for the sake of our hope, it is our souls being informed by His Spirit through our spirits. This is hard to understand until we have had the experience of Nicodemus. This world says believe in that which we can taste and touch and smell, and experience empirically. God says the opposite. He says don’t believe your senses, believe in the One whom you primarily see with your heart.

Now, the word "confidence" only appears two other times in Hebrews. It is a satisfying conviction. This word is used in Hebrews 1:3, to speak of Christ as the very essence of the Father. It is also used in Hebrews 3:14 where it speaks of a guarantee of assurance. Faith, then, provides the firm ground on which we stand, waiting for the assurance of the fulfillment of God’s promises. Our faith is best bolstered by the many promises that God has given and has already fulfilled. Some say faith is believing without evidence. This is wrong due to the many promises God has given throughout history to His people. And, He, the God of the Bible, has quite an inspiring track record. If you doubt this postulate, let me encourage you to read the Bible from beginning to end. As you read it, you will discover some 7,147 promises given by God. And, most of them have been realized.

Faith believes God and banks on Him. This promised assurance has essence and reality. In Romans 8:24 we read, "For we are saved by hope." Our salvation is real right now because we believe God's promises to be true in the future. We continue to read in Romans 8:24, "But hope that is seen is no hope at all. Who hopes for what they already have?" And since, we really believe that the future that God has promised is for real, then we wait patiently for it. This is faith in a future reality, and it gives to its reality a present substance. 

Faith is "assurance in what we do not see." The word "assurance" means the conviction that the unseen exists. Assurance is banking our lives on our hope in the promises of the God of the Bible. When Thomas saw the Lord Jesus, the Lord said, "Thomas, you have seen, and you have believed; blessed is he that has not seen and yet believes." Biblical faith in the God of the Bible actualizes the truth for the future and commits to that actualization. Again, the value of faith is measured best by the object of that faith.

Everybody operates on the principle of faith. The difference is the object of our faith. Thomas Aquinas once said, "To one who has faith, no explanation is necessary. To one without faith, no explanation is possible."  

The ability to perceive God is a spiritual kind of faith. Biblical faith is a supernatural gift from God. In fact, biblical faith, according to Romans 10:17, comes by hearing by the spoken word of Jesus Christ. If a person hears with a willing heart prepared by the Holy Spirit, God grants him the faith to respond. I close with a pertinent quote from Augustine who once said, "Faith is to believe what you do not see; the reward of this faith is to see what you believe."

Friday, March 11, 2022

Hebrews 10:36-39

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36 You need to persevere so that when you have done the will of God, you will receive what he has promised. 37 For, “In just a little while, he who is coming will come and will not delay.” 38 And, “But my righteous one will live by faith. And I take no pleasure in the one who shrinks back.” 39 But we do not belong to those who shrink back and are destroyed, but to those who have faith and are saved. ~ Hebrews 10:36-39

Today, we complete our study of Hebrews 10. The writer of Hebrews wrote to a group of young Jewish Christians who were persecuted so much they were tempted to throw in the towel of their faith in the Lord Jesus. They were under tremendous pressure and they were tempted to go back to their old religion and their old way of life. But, the special thing about faith in the God of the Bible is that it points us beyond now. Faith does not claim that everything’s fine now, that we have nothing to worry about. Faith points us to a better future than the present we experience. The person with faith in the God of the Bible can endure almost infinitely more than a person without it, because this faith connects us to Him and His viewpoint of eternity. 

Having reminded these young believers of their early days when they were so in love with the Lord, the writer of Hebrews underscored the fact that they endured incredibly bad treatment from non-believers and accepted the plundering of their possessions with joy. This is what happens to the one who goes from the darkness to the light. The light is turned on and we are finally enabled to see what is really real. In the midst of darkness, light persists, and the blind man not only gains physical sight, but he also grows in spiritual light.

In v.36 of today's passage we read, "You need to persevere so that when you have done the will of God, you will receive what he has promised."

The word "persevere" means patience. It is always most difficult to live by faith in the God of the Bible when we are going through the most difficult moments in our lives. This is especially difficult when we know not what it means to walk in the Spirit. To walk in the Spirit is to be led by Him essentially to worship God by thinking His thoughts and choosing according to His ways. 

This is what it means to worship God in the spirit. And, when we come to these most intense moments, if we practice patience, we will give God the time needed to give us the perspective we need to persevere in our faith in Him. And, once we have taken a step back to gain that perspective, we will realize the promise of God still awaits us. Interestingly, when we have persevered, we will look back to see the reason we persevered was due to His presence through the Holy Spirit who is at work in our lives.

No believer in Christ wants to lose heart. No believer in Christ wants the heart for living for Him knocked out of us. On the contrary, we all want to be on the cutting edge of usefulness to God regarding that which He is doing in this world. We all know that those good feelings that were associated with our young faith in the God of the Bible tend to drain away. If we are going to be strong on the inside and have hope and joy and resources to love, we are going to have to be renewed day by day. 

Life is not static. It is up and down and up. It is a life where we are filled one day and depleted the next. Daily we learning to be renewed, then expended, only to be renewed and expended again and again. This is how our faith in Him grows. As our faith in Him is stretched and we are forced to look to Him, then, we will more clearly see Him with our hearts. And, the harder the trial that is endured, the greater the view we gain of Him.

In v.37 of today's passage we read, "For, 'In just a little while, he who is coming will come and will not delay.'"

Having told these young Hebrew Christians to look back over their former days when they endured by faith, he now encourages them to look forward in faith to the promise of the Lord's coming. They just had to avoid the trap of looking at their problems. I am convinced that when we get to eternity, we will look back on time and space as we know it and we will say, "That was such a short blip in comparison to eternity." Lacking the perspective of eternity often damages our faith which God wants to bolster so that we can now see how insignificant the things of this world truly are and how significant He and those things of His world truly are.

In v.38-39 of today's passage we read, "38 And, 'But my righteous one will live by faith. And I take no pleasure in the one who shrinks back.' 39 But we do not belong to those who shrink back and are destroyed, but to those who have faith and are saved."

The writer of Hebrews closes this great passage with a simple challenge to live by faith. Being made "righteous" precedes the ability to live by faith. These believers had come a long way, they had endured a lot of difficulty, they just needed to be reminded to choose to believe all the way. And, the unction behind our ability to believe is His righteous presence at work in our lives. True Christianity is not living for God, it is allowing God to live through us. The issue is not us becoming more righteous, it is dying to what we think is right and yielding to what He has already determined to be right.

It is not by sight that we live because we are of another world. We are the abiding place of God, and we have been infused by the Eternal One. He has infused us with the eternal and our confidence is growing in Him. And, it is through faith in Him that we gain His pleasure. Sadly, those who do not believe in the God of the Bible will be destroyed.

Believers in Christ are not those who shrink back; no, we are of those who see from the vantage point of eternity. Enduring trials is how we are galvanized in our trust in the One who gave His life for us. And, it is through our trials that we learn to look to Him and see Him and His goodness with our hearts. This is how our faith is strengthened in Him to the point that we do not turn back to what isn't really real.


Thursday, March 10, 2022

Hebrews 10:32-35

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32 Remember those earlier days after you had received the light, when you endured in a great conflict full of suffering. 33 Sometimes you were publicly exposed to insult and persecution; at other times you stood side by side with those who were so treated. 34 You suffered along with those in prison and joyfully accepted the confiscation of your property, because you knew that you yourselves had better and lasting possessions. 35 So do not throw away your confidence; it will be richly rewarded. ~ Hebrews 10:32-35

Today, we continue our study of Hebrews 10 which is relevant to all believers because who has not at one point or another considered going back to our old way of living because the Christian life is racked with difficulties?

In today's text the writer of Hebrews clearly believed those to whom he wrote this letter were believers. The evidence came from the fact that their early Christian years were marked by their love and joy and hope, despite their hardships and persecutions. They clearly were being defined by the Lord Jesus. They clearly had entered into a personal relationship with Him wherein they were being defined by Him. They cheerfully accepted persecutions, trials, and hardships that came their way. They were living by faith in the One who gave His life for them.

In v.32 of today's text we read, "Remember those earlier days after you had received the light, when you endured in a great conflict full of suffering."

The writer of Hebrews was trying to persuade these young Hebrew Christians from throwing in the towel of their faith in the Lord Jesus Christ. He reminded them of their early days with the Lord Jesus. The only way the believer in Christ can endure this type of suffering these endured is by having received and by being led by the light. The "light" is analogous of the Lord Himself. In fact, He once said, "I am the Light of the world."

These young Hebrew Christians had invited the Lord Jesus to not only be their Savior but also their Lord. It is only after we have entered into a personal relationship with God as evidenced by being born again of His Spirit that we can endure the pain that these young Hebrew Cristians had endured. They had been driven from their homes, separated from their families and had been kicked out of their culture.

The word the writer of Hebrews used here for "conflict" is the word from which we get our English word athletics. Their lives were likened to an epic contest between two powerful forces wherein the battle was defined by whether to maintain their confidence in Christ or let the opposing forces prevail. While God’s grace had genuinely worked in their hearts, they were at a point of exiting the battle.

This type of temptation obviously does not come from God. Even the Lord Jesus underwent this type of temptation. We are told in Matthew 4:1 that He was led by the Spirit into the desert to be tempted by the devil. In James 1:13 we read, "When tempted, no one should say, 'God is tempting me.' For God cannot be tempted by evil, nor does he tempt anyone." We must recognize these are the tactics of the one who wants to steal, to kill and to destroy us. To stop following the Lord Jesus is to give to win to the enemy of our souls.

In v.33 of today's text we read, "Sometimes you were publicly exposed to insult and persecution; at other times you stood side by side with those who were so treated."

Many point to the first recipients of this letter as cowards. I beg to differ when I consider what they went through due to their faith in the Lord Jesus. The words translated "publicly exposed" come from the Greek word that means "theater." They endured public humiliation while on the stage of life for their faith in the Lord Jesus. This humiliation was actually a blessing from God for "God opposes the proud but gives great to the humble." God did not cause it but He allowed it. Early on these young Hebrew believers had evaluated their lives through the lens of the truth of God, and now, they are being tempted to allow the lesser to define them.

In v.34 of today's text we read, "You suffered along with those in prison and joyfully accepted the confiscation of your property, because you knew that you yourselves had better and lasting possessions."

These to whom the writer of Hebrews wrote were losing sight of the fact that according to God's economy adversity is not our most vicious enemy; it is often a very valuable ally. This kind of adversity or persecution reminds us that the perishable things of this world matter little. It is when we invest in the imperishable that matters most. But, if we evaluate worth according to this world's temporal way of thinking, we will invest in the lesser because it is easier to do so.

In v.35 of today's text we read, "So do not throw away your confidence; it will be richly rewarded."

Every day we all are tempted to look to the wrong things to define us. It is also easy to be captivated by the negative and the unwanted things of life that bring us pain and trouble. We must be wise to look at the negatives as means to the end that the Lord has in store for us. There have been many times in my life where I had to remind myself to quit looking at my problems. There are times when looking at our troubling persecutions just is a win for the enemy, for in doing so we lose our focus on what is really real. The focusing of the lens of our faith is what is needed in these situations. But, integral to the development of our faith or our hearts ability to see God are trials. Tune in tomorrow for more on this most fascinating subject in our walk with the Eternal One.