Alastair's Adversaria - Biblical Reading and Reflections: April 23rd (Job 21 & Hebrews 11)
Episode Date: April 22, 2021Job counters his friends' portraits of the wicked. The heroes of faith. My reflections are searchable by Bible chapter here: https://audio.alastairadversaria.com/explore/. If you are interested in s...upporting this project, please consider supporting my work on Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/zugzwanged), using my PayPal account (https://bit.ly/2RLaUcB), or buying books for my research on Amazon (https://www.amazon.co.uk/hz/wishlist/ls/36WVSWCK4X33O?ref_=wl_share). You can also listen to the audio of these episodes on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast/alastairs-adversaria/id1416351035?mt=2.
Transcript
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Job chapter 21. Then Job answered and said,
Keep listening to my words and let this be your comfort. Bear with me, and I will speak,
and after I have spoken, mock on. As for me, is my complaint against man? Why should I not be impatient?
Look at me and be appalled, and lay your hand over your mouth.
When I remember I am dismayed, and shuddering seizes my flesh.
Why do the wicked live, reach old age, and grow mighty in power? Their offspring,
are established in their presence and their descendants before their eyes.
Their houses are safe from fear, and no rod of God is upon them.
Their bull breeds without fail.
Their cow calves, and does not miscarry.
They send out their little boys like a flock, and their children dance.
They sing to the tambourine and the lyre, and rejoice to the sound of the pipe.
They spend their days in prosperity, and in peace they go down to Shiol.
They say to God, depart from us.
not desire the knowledge of your ways. What is the Almighty that we should serve him, and what
profit do we get if we pray to him? Behold, is not their prosperity in their hand? The counsel of
the wicked is far from me. How often is it that the lamp of the wicked is put out, that their
calamity comes upon them, that God distributes pains in his anger, that they are like straw
before the wind, and like chaff that the storm carries away? You say, God stores up their
iniquity for their children. Let him pay it out to them, that they may know it. Let their own
eyes see their destruction, and let them drink of the wrath of the Almighty. For what do they care
for their houses after them, when the number of their months is cut off? Will any teach God knowledge,
seeing that he judges those who are in high? One dies in his full vigour, being wholly at ease and
secure, his pails full of milk, and the marrow of his bones moist. Another dies in bitterness
of soul, never having tasted of prosperity. They lie down alike in the dust, and the worms cover them.
Behold, I know your thoughts, and your schemes to wrong me, for you say, where is the house of the
prince? Where is the tent in which the wicked lived? Have you not asked those who travel the roads,
and do you not accept their testimony, that the evil man is spared in the day of calamity,
that he has rescued in the day of wrath? Who declares his way to his face, and who repays him for
what he has done. When he is carried to the grave, watch is kept over his tomb. The clods of the valley
are sweet to him. All mankind follows after him, and those who go before him are innumerable.
How then will you comfort me with empty nothings? There is nothing left of your answers but
falsehood. Job chapter 21 is the final speech in the second cycle of speeches. Within it, Job
responds to all of his friends. To this point in this cycle of discourses, Job and the friends have
both been speaking largely past each other. The friends have been presenting their portraits of the
fate of the wicked, and Job has been declaring his case before God and lamenting his situation. Now, however,
he deals with them quite directly, and he's responding to their presentation of the wicked,
maintaining that their retributionist account does not actually hold true in reality. To this point,
the friends, whose duty it was to provide comfort to Job, had done nothing of the kind. They had merely
exacerbated his suffering. Job, likely sarcastically, makes one request of them, that they be silent
and listened to his words, granting him that one thing would be more comfort than they had provided
to that point. After they had heard him out, they could return to their mocking. Job is likely
referring particularly to Zofar there. Job's main complaint, his chief case is against the Lord,
his issue isn't with man, rather than presumptuously taking up the case of the Lord for him,
the friends should hold their peace, listen to Job, and take account of his situation.
Each of the friends in this second cycle of speeches had presented a portrait of the wicked and their fate.
Within this speech, Job will challenge their accounts head on.
Elifaz had said in Chapter 15, verses 29 to 30,
He will not be rich, and his wealth will not endure, nor will his possessions spread over the earth.
He will not depart from darkness.
The flame will dry up his shoots, and by the breath of his mouth,
he will depart. In chapter 18
verses 16 to 19,
Bildad had said, his roots dry up
beneath and his branches whither above.
His memory perishes from the earth,
and he has no name in the street.
He is thrust from light into darkness,
and driven out of the world.
He has no posterity or progeny among his people,
and no survivor where he used to live.
Finally, in chapter 20 verse 11,
Zofar has spoken about the premature demise of the wicked person.
His bones are full of his youth,
vigor, but it will lie down with him in the dust.
All of these bold and dogmatic claims, however, Job argues,
fail the empirical test.
Job would have them pay attention to their own society.
There are a great many people who, though wicked,
enjoy considerable power and wealth.
Far from dying prematurely, they are living to old age
and seeing their posterity after them.
They know peace and security in their situation,
and their flocks and herds flourish.
Their houses are places of joy, ease and happiness.
of song, mirth, and dancing.
When they die, it is not violently and prematurely, but in old age and in peace.
All of this directly contradicts statements like those of Zofar in chapter 20 versus 10 and 26 to 28.
His children will seek the favour of the poor, and his hands will give back his wealth.
Utter darkness is laid up for his treasures.
A fire not fanned will devour him.
What is left in his tent will be consumed.
The heavens will reveal his iniquity.
and the earth will rise up against him.
The possessions of his house will be carried away,
dragged off in the day of God's wrath.
And yet these are people who openly incite God's wrath,
who dismiss his counsel,
and do so, seemingly, with impunity.
However good the retributionist doctrine might seem in theory,
it does not seem to hold in practice.
Bildad, in chapter 18, verse 5 to 6,
had confidently declared,
Indeed, the light of the wicked is put out,
and the flame of his fire does not.
shine. The light is dark in his tent, and his lamp above him is put out. To which Job responds
doubtfully. How often does that actually happen? Poetic justice may be wonderful, but it seldom seems to
appear. Job alludes to statements like those of Psalm 1, verses 4 to 6. The wicked are not so,
but are like chaff that the wind drives away. Therefore the wicked will not stand in the judgment,
nor sinners in the congregation of the righteous. For the Lord knows the way of the righteous, but the way of the
wicked will perish. Job anticipates the response at this point, the retributionist can come back to him
and say, ah, but the judgment will come upon their children. Yet a judgment that's not inflicted
upon the wrongdoers themselves does not seem to be satisfactory. While the proposal that there might
be a lengthy delay in the Lord's visiting of his judgment upon the wicked might be designed to uphold
his justice, it raises as many problems as it settles. While the piety of the retributionist's
doctrine may be well-intentioned, it is in fact presumptuous. It arrogates to itself the task of
vindicating God's justice and explaining the basis of God's judgment, and yet it is readily undermined
by experience. The disparities of life, especially when considered in the light of the levelling effect
of death, do not seem to sustain the retributionist teaching. Job sees in all of the speeches of his
friend a deeper, more sinister intention. Perhaps we get a sense of this in verse 28. For
you say, where is the house of the prince, where is the tent in which the wicked lived?
Their scheme and plan, perhaps, is to discredit Job as the chief of the men of the East.
Job occupies the position of a king, and when we consider what has befallen him,
it should be clear that it is a disaster for the entire people.
And as such, it doesn't just single Job out as guilty as an individual.
It discredits him as a leader of his people.
Or at least, that's how the friends seem to see things,
and perhaps their speeches are designed to get Job.
to submit to their claims. If he did so, it would likely be to their great strengthening.
They would likely take to themselves much of the power and authority that Job himself had lost.
The claims to which Job is responding here are perhaps ones like those of Bildad in chapter 18
verses 14 to 21. He is torn from the tent in which he trusted and is brought to the king of
terrors. In his tent dwells that which is none of his. Sulfur is scattered over his habitation.
His roots dry up beneath, and his branches wither above.
His memory perishes from the earth, and he has no name in the street.
He is thrust from light into darkness, and driven out of the world.
He has no posterity or progeny among his people, and no survivor where he used to live.
They of the west are appalled at his day, and Horace seizes them of the east.
Surely such are the dwellings of the unrighteous, such is the place of him who knows not God.
And yet Job insists, talk to him.
some of the people who have travelled around a lot. They can recount many stories of evil princes
and rulers who have nonetheless retained their power, wealth and authority. Again, the retributionist
doctrine failed the empirical test. And while you can claim that death is the great leveller,
such evil men can be brought to their tombs in honour. They die in peace at an old age, they are
followed by a large crowd of mourners, and whole societies lament their passing. Many such cases
like these show that the words of the friends are empty. They have nothing of substance to give.
Such words afford no comfort at all. A question to consider. Verse 22 speaks of a situation where people
eager for the justice and the honour of God can end up presenting themselves as wiser than God,
teaching things that clearly go against God's reality or his word, in order, theologically to
airbrush some troubling details out. What are some of the ways that we might fall into the same
trap as the friends do in this regard.
Hebrews chapter 11.
Now faith is the assurance of things hopeful, the conviction of things not seen, for by it the people
of old received their commendation. By faith we understand that the universe was created by the
word of God, so that what is seen was not made out of things that are visible. By faith Abel offered
to God a more acceptable sacrifice than Cain, through which he was commended as righteous, God
commending him by accepting his gifts, and through his faith, though he died, he still speaks.
By faith Enoch was taken up, so that he should not see death, and he was not found because God
had taken him. Now before he was taken, he was commended as having pleased God, and without faith
it is impossible to please him, for whoever would draw near to God must believe that he exists,
and that he rewards those who seek him. By faith Noah, being warned by God concerning events as yet
unseen, in reverent fear constructed an ark for the saving of his household. By this he condemned the
world and became an heir of the righteousness that comes by faith. By faith Abraham obeyed when he was
called to go out to a place that he was to receive as an inheritance, and he went out, not knowing where he
was going. By faith he went to live in the land of promise, as in a foreign land, living in tents with
Isaac and Jacob, heirs with him of the same promise. But he was looking forward to the city that
has foundations, whose designer and builder is God. By faith, Sarah herself received power to conceive,
even when she was past the age, since she considered him faithful who had promised. Therefore,
from one man, and him as good as dead, were born descendants as many as the stars of heaven,
and as many as the innumerable grains of sand by the seashore. These all died in faith,
not having received the things promised, but having seen them and greeted them from afar,
and having acknowledged that they were strangers and exiles on the earth,
for people who speak thus make it clear that they are seeking a homeland.
If they had been thinking of that land from which they had gone out,
they would have had opportunity to return.
But as it is, they desire a better country, that is, a heavenly one.
Therefore God is not ashamed to be called their God,
for he has prepared for them a city.
By faith Abraham, when he was tested, offered up Isaac,
and he who had received the promise of,
was in the act of offering up his only son, of whom it was said, through Isaac shall your offspring be named.
He considered that God was able even to raise him from the dead, from which, figuratively speaking, he did receive him back.
By faith, Isaac invoked future blessings on Jacob and Esau.
By faith, Jacob, when dying, blessed each of the sons of Joseph, bowing in worship over the head of his staff.
By faith, Joseph at the end of his life, made mention of the Exodus of the Israelites,
and gave directions concerning his bones.
By faith, Moses, when he was born,
was hidden for three months by his parents
because they saw that the child was beautiful,
and they were not afraid of the king's edict.
By faith, Moses, when he was grown up,
refused to be called the son of Pharaoh's daughter,
choosing rather to be mistreated with the people of God
than to enjoy the fleeting pleasures of sin.
He considered the reproach of Christ's greater wealth
than the treasures of Egypt,
for he was looking to the reward.
By faith he left Egypt, not being afraid of the anger of the king, for he endured as seeing him who is invisible.
By faith he kept the Passover and sprinkled the blood, so that the destroyer of the firstborn might not touch them.
By faith the people crossed the Red Sea, as on dry land, but the Egyptians, when they attempted to do the same, were drowned.
By faith, the walls of Jericho fell down after they had been encircled for seven days.
by faith Rehab the prostitute did not perish with those who were disobedient
because she had given a friendly welcome to the spies
And what more shall I say
For time would fail me to tell of Gideon
Barak, Samson, Jephtha, of David and Samuel and the prophets
Who through faith conquered kingdoms, enforced justice,
Obtained promises,
Stop the mouths of lions,
quenched the power of fire,
Escape the edge of the sword,
Were made strong out of weakness,
became mighty in war, put foreign armies to flight. Women received back their dead by resurrection.
Some were tortured, refusing to accept release, so that they might rise again to a better life.
Others suffered mocking and flogging, and even chains and imprisonment. They were stoned,
they were sawn in two, they were killed with the sword, they went about in skins of sheep and goats,
destitute, afflicted, mistreated, of whom the world was not worthy, wandering about in deserts and mountains,
dens and caves of the earth, and all these, though commended through their faith, did not receive
what was promised, since God had provided something better for us, that apart from us, they should
not be made perfect. Hebrews 11 is one of the most famous chapters of the New Testament. It's a great
roll call of the faith. It takes the heroes from the beginning of creation to the coming of Christ.
As Gareth Cockerol observes, it serves a number of purposes within the argument of the book.
It clarifies the nature of faith that the heroes of the book are being charged to emulate.
It provides us with models to follow and motivation for faithfulness in the present.
The models provided by the faithful of the past are also partial prefigurations of the faithfulness of Christ,
the ultimate example of faithfulness, by which the full reality is finally realized.
Finally, the company of the faithful from all generations is an alternative community to which to belong
and with which to identify, especially in contexts of great pressure to apostatize,
such a community is of immense value.
The examples of the saints of all ages have long served as examples for Christians to follow,
helping them to persevere and be faithful in difficult times.
The list of this chapter gives the Christians being addressed a sense of their heritage,
but it is not just a straightforward telling of the story of Israel.
The unfaithfulness of Israel, especially in the wilderness generation,
had served as a cautionary example earlier in the book.
Now we are presented with another way of reading the Old Testament history,
one that traces the theme of faith throughout,
one that reaches its climax in Christ,
and one in which we can find ourselves.
The examples that are given inspire and encourage,
and they also give more clarity,
giving us a sense of what faith will look like in various situations.
We should recognise also the way that this chapter unpacks the meaning
of Habakkuk chapter 2 verse 4. The righteous shall live by his faith. The chapter begins with a
definition of faith. Faith is oriented to the future and also to that which is present but unseen
concerning God's existence and work. In 2 Corinthians chapter 5 verse 7, the Apostle Paul contrasts
walking by faith to walking by sight. Faith enables us to perceive things that others do not,
things that are invisible. The person of faith can live in terms of God's existence, his promise,
his providence, his power and his faithfulness.
This is the horizon in terms of which they live their lives.
And this way of living by faith enabled the great heroes of old to do their great deeds.
Without such faith, the sort of faith that the recipients of the book need at that moment in time,
they would not have done what they once did.
The opening statement, faith is the assurance of things hopeful,
might be better translated in stronger terms.
Faith is the reality of things hopeful.
It isn't just a subjective sense.
Faith for the author of Hebrews is not just a state of mind.
It's a concrete way of life.
Faith operates in terms of the reality of the things that are anticipated.
While others can drift aimless as if through empty space,
faith moves in the powerful gravitational field of the realities hoped for and promised by God.
Again, faith is the evidence of things not seen,
not merely the conviction of them, as the ESV translates.
Faith itself is objective evidence of unseen things,
much as the movement of a body in space in its orbit
can serve as evidence of a much larger yet unseen body that's acting upon it.
When we look at the lives of people of faith,
we can see something of the power and the reality
of something much greater than anything that can be seen acting upon them.
And the author of Hebrew starts with creation,
in order to move sequentially through the entire Old Testament.
But a deeper claim is made in verse 3.
What he is saying is that the ultimate reality,
the thing that underlies everything else,
that is deeper, more real and more true than everything else,
is the word and the power of God.
The most fundamental reality is not what is visible
and immediately tangible.
God founded the creation by his word and power,
and it is by these things that true reality here and now is also determined.
Those who act in terms of the unseen facts of God's power and word,
are living in terms of foundational reality itself.
And he retells the primeval history.
Abel, of course, is the first martyr.
But yet he's praised not for his martyrdom so much as something that happened before it,
his offering of a more acceptable sacrifice.
Cain responded to his rejection of his sacrifice with anger,
revealing something about the character of his offering as an attempt to control God.
He was angry when he did not get what he wanted from God.
whereas Abel, by contrast, offered in a way that was accepted.
It's not just the objective reality that he offered, it was the way that he offered too.
He's an example of true sacrifice, which anticipates his martyrdom,
when he will offer himself up in some sense.
Sacrifice was also here, as Hebrews is suggesting, always about faith,
not mere visible ritual.
What really mattered was not just the offering itself,
it was the faith by which it was given.
earlier he has quoted. Earlier he has quoted Psalm 40 verse 6 to make the point that what God wants is not primarily sacrifice and offering, but the heart that is oriented to do his will, with the law of God written upon it. And Abel is of course an example of this. His offering of a right sacrifice arises from a heart of faith that is set towards God. From the example of Abel he moves to Enoch. Enoch was taken by God so that he did not experience death. He was saved.
from death. This was evidence that he pleased or walked with God. Abel and Enoch in their particular
ways both pleased God. And the author of Hebrew's reasons, in both cases, from their pleasing of God,
Abel by his sacrifice, and Enoch by the fact that the Lord took him, back to their faith. Without
faith, it is impossible to please God. Faith pleases God because it is faith that corresponds to
God's power and his promise. It is faith that lives in terms of God's existence.
the things not seen, and it is faith that lives in terms of the future that he proclaims,
things hopeful. Both Abel and Enoch exemplify this.
Noah is a further example from the primeval history. He's an example of the future orientation of
faith. With reverent fear, he acted. He recognises the reality of God's power and holiness
and lives and acts accordingly. The story of the flood is a paradigmatic example of the last
judgment in the New Testament. And the author of Hebrew
has been encouraging people to live in terms of the seriousness and severity of God's judgment.
As in the case of Noah, the prospect of God's judgment in the future should shape their action in the present.
Verse of 3 to 7 concern the primeval history, and verses 8 to 22 move into the patriarchal history.
Abraham, of course, is the father of the Jews and also of the faithful.
Abraham and Moses receive the most attention within this chapter because they are such central figures.
Abraham had to surrender his past for the sake of a promise.
He had to leave behind his country, his kindred and his father's house
and move forward to receive a promise that God held out for him.
He had to hold all of these things that he once possessed
with an open hand and allow God to remove them from it.
He had to surrender all of the things that seem so solid and sure and immediate
for the sake of a word from God concerning the long-distant future.
He lived as a stranger and a sojourner in the land that was promised.
He looked forward to something even greater, of which the promised land was just a symbol.
He looked for a city that has foundations, whose designer and builder is God.
This city is a thing not seen, it's a thing hoped for.
And yet, despite that fact, the author of Hebrews wants us to have a sense of its great solidity.
God is the builder of this city.
The God who created the world has created this city too.
Our cities here may seem secure, but the implication of this statement is that they,
lack foundations. This is the city that has true reality. The deepest reality is not what is
immediate to us, but what lies in the realm of God's promise and word. Sarah receives the power
to conceive. The child of promise is not just the child of the flesh. It isn't just that she has a
child, but rather that the child, and all the future that the child holds in store, is received
from the promise and the power and the purpose of God. The child is not received. The child is not
through human power, and the child's purpose will not be achieved through human power.
Faith weans people off the immediacy of the world. Those things that once seem so powerful and
secure begin to be recognized as insubstantial creatures of time, things that will soon pass. Only the
word of God will endure. We ground ourselves in something beyond the present age and the immediacy
of what is before us. We recognize that we have a much greater homeland. This isn't just some
idyllic past that we have left behind and desire to return to, it's the promise of God's future,
the promise of a heavenly city and homeland. God is not ashamed to be called the god of such
persons. Faith corresponds to his power and his promise, and thereby pleases him.
The point of faith is not some power inherent in faith itself, but rather its responsiveness
to a power and reality outside of itself. Abraham offers up Isaac. This is a power. This
This is the final test.
At the beginning with his call he had to surrender everything from his past, and in the offering
up of Isaac, he has to surrender everything that he thought was certain about his future.
God's promise had to be recognised as sure than life itself.
His trust was not in the sun that he could see and touch, but in the promise of God that
gave that son to him, and if that son were to die, could give him back again.
We have an example of this, of course, in the story of the Shunamite woman.
She receives a child from the Lord, and when that child is taken by death, goes to the prophet
Elisha, and in faith receives that child back.
Isaac, Jacob, and Joseph are all mentioned as those who bless their sons concerning things to come.
Jacob's blessing of the two sons of Joseph is particularly singled out.
It is a more theological blessing than some of the others.
We see this in Genesis chapter 48, verse 15 to 16.
And he blessed Joseph and said,
God before whom my father's Abraham and Isaac walked, the God who has been my shepherd all my life long
to this day, the angel who has redeemed me from all evil, bless the boys, and in them let my name be
carried on, and the name of my father's Abraham and Isaac, and let them grow into a multitude in the
midst of the earth. He's passing on, transmitting the blessing that he himself has known,
looking towards the future, acting towards that horizon of God's promise. And Joseph does the same,
He calls for his bones to be taken up out of Egypt in the future.
In anticipation of the Exodus, he makes those instructions of all the events of Joseph's life.
This is the thing that stands out to the author of Hebrews.
He sees this future event of the Exodus,
and he makes instructions concerning his bones,
his deliverance from death, as it were,
his deliverance from the land of Egypt, into the land of Canaan.
And when they go out of Egypt, they take Joseph's bones,
and the very end of the story of Joshua is the burial of Joseph's bones.
Joseph anticipates a deliverance from the grave,
a deliverance of his bones into the land of promise,
a deliverance that anticipates a greater deliverance from the grave,
the deliverance of resurrection.
Joseph anticipated the Exodus in the instructions that he gave concerning his bones,
and the story of Moses and the Exodus follows in verses 23 to 31.
There are parallels with the Abraham section,
parallels that play out in reverse order.
There's deliverance of Moses from death, like Isaac was delivered from death.
There's opposition from the world, like the alienation faced by the patriarchs.
The departure from Egypt corresponds with Abraham's departure for the place of God's promise.
Moses' parents are introduced as people of faith.
There is a heritage of faith that Moses continues in.
They perceive that he was a beautiful child.
Acts 720 maybe conveys something of what is meant by this.
At this time Moses was born and he was beautiful in God's sight.
Like Isaac was only begotten, they recognised that there was something special about Moses through faith.
Abraham had other children beyond Isaac, but Isaac was uniquely singled out as the child of promise,
and it seems that Moses' parents recognised something similar about him.
He wasn't just a child that they loved dearly.
He had some part to play in God's purposes.
And they weren't afraid of the king's edict
concerning the killing of the baby boys
because they recognized something greater,
a power that exceeded the power of Pharaoh.
Moses accepted persecution with the people of God.
He forwent his privileges as a son of the daughter of Pharaoh.
Such an identification was costly.
He had to give up the fleeting pleasures of sin
for persecution for the promises of God,
things that are far more enduring and valuable.
He took on the reproach of Christ.
Considering that Moses lived long before the incarnation of Christ,
it may seem strange to talk about him taking on the reproach of Christ.
However, faith is fundamentally that which acts in terms of God's appointed future
and those things that are unseen.
Moses had some sense of the glories that awaited and lived in terms of them.
He acted as one seeing God and seeing the future that he held out.
This was seen in the Passover and the crossing of the Red Sea,
events that exhibited God's power over those things that are trusted by those who live by sight.
And here the Israelites also showed faith.
They walked through the Red Sea on dry ground,
trusting God while the prospect of death lay around them on all those other sides.
The power of God was seen as the people responded to him in faith.
And the falling of the walls of Jericho were also an example of the people's faith.
gave them an instruction, an instruction that seemed entirely nonsensical, but unless they did
this they would not have known the victory. This was something done in a situation of great peril.
They had crossed the Jordan into the promised land. This was the first city that they were
facing. And if they lost at this city or faced some setback, there would be no easy route of
retreat. Indeed, if they saw signs of weakness, the people of the land might well get together
and crushed them. It took a lot of bravery to take such an action. But that bravery,
made sense in the light of faith. They saw the power and the promise of God, and they acted accordingly.
Rehab is the last of the main examples of the list of persons of faith. She was someone who responded
to God's word, his power and his promise. She had heard reports of the Lord and his promise,
and she believed what she heard and acted accordingly. She was a prostitute, blessed, not an account
of what she deserved, but on the basis of God's grace and good pleasure. She was delivered from death,
as she identified with the people of God,
even at that moment where they might have seen most vulnerable
and where that identification could prove most costly.
The author of Hebrews could continue the tour through the Old Testament,
but he hastens us through the long corridor,
past many doors he could have shown us into,
a number of them quite surprising.
We might not expect to see characters such as Samson and Jephtha in the list, for instance.
He traces the story through these characters,
through the judges into the story of the kingdom and through that into the story of the prophets.
Faith is seen in a host of different situations, in battle, in perseverance through suffering,
in accepting opposition and alienation. We can notice a movement from battles and military
struggles to a focus upon persecution, suffering, rejection, from the faith of judges and kings
to the faith of the prophets, whose struggle was often a much lonelier one. We should also
recognize a number of the events that are alluded to, from tradition and from Scripture.
The Shunamite woman in 2nd Kings chapter 4 is an example of a woman receiving her dead
son back. According to tradition, Jeremiah was stoned. Isaiah was sawn in two. Wondering about
in the wilderness might remind us of Elijah. The world considered such people unworthy and despised
and rejected them. However, in the process they presented themselves as unworthy of the people
of faith. There is throughout scripture a test of hospitality that's given. If the people of God
are welcomed in a place, that place can often be blessed on their account, but if they are rejected,
that place will suffer judgment. The faithful heroes of the book of Hebrews are to look to these
figures as their forerunners in the faith, errs with them of a promise of God. But the forerunners
did not receive that promise. It's only through Christ's high priestly work that the promise of God
has been brought into more concrete reality.
The people of God now more directly receive benefits
that these forerunners could only anticipate and await.
We have been perfected, made fit to enter God's presence through Christ's work,
and now they can share in what we have received.
A question to consider,
what are some of the ways in which we can grow
through the examples of the lives of the forerunners in the faith?
What are some ways in which such lives testified to the truth of God?
God.
