The Bible Recap - Day 357 (Hebrews 11-13) - Year 5
Episode Date: December 23, 2023SHOW NOTES: - Head to our Start Page for all you need to begin! - Join the RECAPtains - Check out the TBR Store - Show credits - Listen to the new Scrooge: A Christmas Carol podcast FROM TODAY’S... RECAP: - Video: 2 Timothy Overview - Prep for 2024 episode! SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook D-Group: Instagram | Facebook TLC: Instagram | Facebook D-GROUP: D-Group is brought to you by the same team that brings you The Bible Recap. TBR is where we read the Bible, and D-Group is where we study the Bible. D-Group is an international network of Bible study groups that meet weekly in homes, churches, and online. Find or start one near you today! DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact.
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for the Bible Recap.
New Testament people, we finished our 20th book today.
And if you've been with us since Genesis, you just checked off book number 59.
Today we read the chapter some people affectionately refer to as the Faith Hall of Fame or the
Hall of Faith, Hebrews 11.
The author starts out by defining faith for us in verse 1.
Faith is the assurance of things hoped for and the conviction of things not seen.
This is why we'll be faithless someday, like we talked about.
Because what we hoped for and were convinced of will be fully realized and seen and experienced.
This verse also points out an important distinction.
Faith isn't some kind of vague feeling centered on nothing.
Faith isn't good vibes and positive energy.
Faith has a definite object.
The Christian faith is faith in Christ.
He is who our faith hopes for and is convinced of.
He is who our faith points toward and rests on fully.
In verse two, the author starts unpacking information for us
about how people in the Old Testament
were saved by faith too.
It says, for by it, the people of old
received their commendation.
The former generations were commended
because of their faith in Christ too,
even though they didn't know His name.
They knew Yahweh, the one true God, and Jesus is God.
The next several verses walk us down the hall in chronological order,
starting with Abel and walking us through the stories of the Old Testament,
and he even includes a woman for good measure.
Shout out to Sarah.
He says he could go on and on listing out the individual stories of faith,
but he doesn't have time to write them all out.
He talks about the incredible things they received
and the horrible things they endured.
Faith in God isn't just a faith that believes He'll bless us with what we want.
It's also what empowers us to endure through trials and denials.
Some of these people stopped the mouths of lions, but some of these people were sawn
in too.
This is one of the reasons I'm cautious about saying phrases like,
I'm believing God for X, because that phrasing sounds like I'm demanding that God answer
in the way I deem best,
because I've already determined what the outcome should be,
and if He chooses to do anything different, He's letting me down.
Wisdom and Scripture point us more in the direction of saying,
I'm asking God for X, and I'm believing Him.
Period. Regardless.
He is the object of our faith. He is what our faith terminates on.
In verse 39, the author tells us these great people of faith didn't receive what was promised. When I was younger, this verse
really bothered me. I pulled it out of context and held it up to God like, look, see, you're
a liar. You didn't come through for them. But that's not what the verse is saying. These
people hoped in the Messiah, but they died before he was born. He still came. The promise
was still fulfilled for them. They just didn't see it.
In chapter 12, God says all these people
from the Old Testament testified to the fact
that God is true and Jesus is worth it.
They know it now fully because they're in his presence.
And with them as our examples of what it looks like
to walk in faith, he calls us to throw off
what encumbers us and entangles us
and fix our focus on the finish line. Things may be challenging for us, but none of us
have endured anything close to what Christ endured for us. And on top of that, God has
called us His children. So sometimes we'll have to endure His discipline because every
good parent disciplines their kids. His discipline is meant to heal us, not punish us.
Verse 11 says discipline yields the peaceful fruit of righteousness to those who have been
trained by it. God isn't punishing us, He's training us. If you work out, you know those
can sometimes feel like the same thing, but you also know that training is where the fruit
comes from. God's fruit is the muscles of peace and righteousness. Do not nickname your
biceps that.
The author encourages them to walk in unity and holiness, to fight against bitterness
and sexual immorality and impulsivity.
He uses Esau as a reference point here, then he says something that could be really confusing.
He says,
When he desired to inherit the blessing, he was rejected, for he found no chance to repent,
though he sought it with tears.
This isn't saying he wanted to repent and God wouldn't forgive him.
Peter committed a much more serious sin against Jesus in the flesh three times,
and Jesus sought him out to forgive him.
We know God is forgiving.
What we have to remember about this word, repent, is that it means to turn.
Esau couldn't turn things around, even though he really wanted to.
He couldn't unsell his birthright.
He couldn't get the blessing back.
This section isn't here to say God will never forgive our sins.
Otherwise, what's all this talk about Jesus paying for our sins?
This section is here to remind us that sin has consequences.
And the author is imploring his readers to take sin seriously, because some of its consequences
can impact you for life, even if they don't impact you for eternity.
Chapter 13 talks about things that bring a smile to God's face. Loving each other
well, being kind to strangers, caring for those in need, honoring the purity of
marriage, contentment, honoring our leaders, doing good, sharing, and holding to solid
doctrine in our beliefs. He reminds us that all of this will be shaken someday.
Both heaven and earth will be shaken.
Verse 14 says,
Here we have no lasting city,
but we seek the city that is to come.
What city is he talking about?
This is reference to the New Jerusalem,
and we'll talk more about it in the days ahead.
He closes with a beautiful benediction in verses 20 through 21.
It says,
Now may the God of peace who brought again from the dead our Lord Jesus,
the great shepherd of the sheep, by the blood of the eternal covenant,
equip you with everything good that you may do His will,
working in us that which is pleasing in His sight through Jesus Christ,
to whom be glory forever and ever. Amen.
If the burden fell on me to be able to do God's will in my own
strength and discipline, I would despair. I'm far too much like the Israelites. I'm
so grateful he follows that call to do God's will with the reminder that God has not only
given us everything we need to do His will, but that He's actually working in us to
accomplish it. What a relief! To God be the glory indeed.
Today my God shot was an 11-6.
Whoever would draw near to God must believe that he exists and that he rewards those who seek him.
God is a rewarder of those who seek him. And if you're seeking him, then what's the best reward you could get?
The thing you're seeking. When we seek Him, He rewards us with more of Himself.
Nothing is better and nothing lasts longer and nothing else can't be taken away.
He is the rewarder and He is the reward and He's where the joy is.
Tomorrow we'll be reading Paul's second letter to Timothy. Check out the 7-minute
video overview in the show notes. Okay Bible readers, it's time for our weekly check-in. I know I said
it in my Godshot, but I just want to emphasize this again. Hebrews 11 6 is talking to us.
The Lord, the God of the universe, says He rewards those who seek Him. And that's what you're doing
here every day. Some of you for almost a full year or longer, you're seeking Him in His Word.
And when we do this, we get more of Him, which is the best possible reward.
We've only got one more weekly check-in left in this trip through the Bible, but I want
you to keep getting rewarded even after that, don't you?
So why don't you plan to start all over with us again on January 1st?
By the way, you can probably expect that these last eight days are going to be a little bit
challenging. I mean, we've got Revelation on deck soon, but you probably expect that these last eight days are going to be a little bit challenging.
I mean, we've got Revelation on deck soon.
But you can also expect those last eight days to be beautiful.
So I'm praying you'll finish strong.
We'll see you back here tomorrow.
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You probably know the story of a Christmas carol, but you've never heard it like the
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Rhys Davis, and Juliet Mills. Click the link in the show notes to listen.