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THE EPISTLE OF
PAUL THE APOSTLE TO THE
HEBREWS
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
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CHAPTER 11
@Heb
11:1-40. DEFINITION OF THE
FAITH JUST
SPOKEN OF (@Heb
10:39): EXAMPLES FROM THE
OLD COVENANT
FOR OUR
PERSEVERANCE IN
FAITH.
1. Description of
the great things which faith (in its widest sense:
not here restricted to faith in the Gospel sense)
does for us. Not a full definition of faith in its
whole nature, but a description of its great
characteristics in relation to the subject of Paul's
exhortation here, namely, to perseverance.
substance, &c.--It substantiates promises of
God which we hope for, as future in fulfilment, making
them present realities to us. However, the Greek is
translated in @Heb
3:14, "confidence"; and it also here may mean "sure
confidence." So ALFORD
translates. THOMAS
MAGISTER
supports English Version, "The whole thing that
follows is virtually contained in the first principle; now
the first commencement of the things hoped for is
in us through the assent of faith, which virtually
contains all the things hoped for." Compare Note,
see on Heb 6:5, "tasted . . . powers of the world to
come." Through faith, the future object of Christian hope,
in its beginning, is already present. True faith
infers the reality of the objects believed in and honed
for (@Heb
11:6). HUGO DE
ST. VICTOR
distinguished faith from hope. By faith
alone we are sure of eternal things that they
ARE: but by hope
we are confident that WE SHALL HAVE
them. All hope presupposes faith (@Ro
8:25).
evidence--"demonstration": convincing proof
to the believer: the soul thereby seeing what the eye
cannot see.
things not seen--the whole invisible and
spiritual world: not things future and things pleasant, as
the "things hoped for," but also the past and present, and
those the reverse of pleasant. "Eternal life is promised
to us, but it is when we are dead: we are told of a
blessed resurrection, but meanwhile we moulder in the
dust; we are declared to be justified, and sin dwells in
us; we hear that we are blessed, meantime we are
overwhelmed in endless miseries: we are promised abundance
of all goods, but we still endure hunger and thirst; God
declares He will immediately come to our help, but He
seems deaf to our cries. What should we do if we had not
faith and hope to lean on, and if our mind did not emerge
amidst the darkness above the world by the shining of the
Word and Spirit of God?" [CALVIN].
Faith is an assent unto truths credible upon the testimony
of God (not on the reasonableness of the thing
revealed, though by this we may judge as to whether it be
what it professes, a genuine revelation), delivered unto
us in the writings of the apostles and prophets. Thus
Christ's ascension is the cause, and His absence the
crown, of our faith: because He ascended, we the more
believe, and because we believe in Him who hath ascended,
our faith is the more accepted [BISHOP
PEARSON].
Faith believes what it sees not; for if thou seest there
is no faith; the Lord has gone away so as not to be seen:
He is hidden that He may be believed; the yearning desire
by faith after Him who is unseen is the preparation of a
heavenly mansion for us; when He shall be seen it shall be
given to us as the reward of faith [AUGUSTINE].
As Revelation deals with spiritual and invisible things
exclusively, faith is the faculty needed by us, since it
is the evidence of things not seen. By faith we venture
our eternal interests on the bare word of God, and this is
altogether reasonable.
2. For--So high a
description of faith is not undeserved; for . . . [ALFORD].
by it--Greek, "in it": in respect to
. . . in the matter of," it, "or, as Greek more
emphatically, "this."
the elders--as though still living and giving
their powerful testimony to the reasonableness and
excellence of faith (@Heb
12:1). Not merely the ancients, as though they
were people solely of the past; nay, they belong to the
one and the same blessed family as ourselves (@Heb
11:39,40). "The elders," whom we all revere so
highly. "Paul shows how we ought to seek in all its
fulness, under the veil of history, the essential
substance of the doctrine sometimes briefly indicated" [BENGEL].
"The elders," as "the fathers," is a title of honor given
on the ground of their bright faith and practice.
obtained a good report--Greek, "were
testified of," namely, favorably (compare @Heb
7:8). It is a phrase of Luke, Paul's companion. Not
only men, but God, gave testimony to their faith (@Heb
11:4,5,39). Thus they being testified of themselves
have become "witnesses" to all others (@Heb
12:1). The earlier elders had their patience exercised
for a long period of life: those later, in sharper
afflictions. Many things which they hoped for and did not
see, subsequently came to pass and were conspicuously
seen, the event confirming faith [BENGEL].
3. we understand--We
perceive with our spiritual intelligence the fact of the
world's creation by God, though we see neither Him nor the
act of creation as described in @Ge
1:1-31. The natural world could not, without
revelation, teach us this truth, though it confirms the
truth when apprehended by faith (@Ro
1:20). Adam is passed over in silence here as to his
faith, perhaps as being the first who fell and brought sin
on us all; though it does not follow that he did not
repent and believe the promise.
worlds--literally, "ages"; all that exists in
time and space, visible and invisible, present and
eternal.
framed--"fitly formed and consolidated";
including the creation of the single parts and the
harmonious organization of the whole, and the continual
providence which maintains the whole throughout all ages.
As creation is the foundation and a specimen of the whole
divine economy, so faith in creation is the foundation and
a specimen of all faith [BENGEL].
by the word of God--not here, the personal
word (Greek, "logos," @Joh
1:1) but the spoken word (Greek, "rhema");
though by the instrumentality of the personal word (@Heb
1:2).
not made, &c.--Translate as Greek, "so
that not out of things which appear hath that which is
seen been made"; not as in the case of all things which we
see reproduced from previously existing and visible
materials, as, for instance, the plant from the seed, the
animal from the parent, &c., has the visible world sprung
into being from apparent materials. So also it is implied
in the first clause of the verse that the invisible
spiritual worlds were framed not from previously existing
materials. BENGEL
explains it by distinguishing "appear," that is, begin
to be seen (namely, at creation), from that which
is seen as already in existence, not merely
beginning to be seen; so that the things seen were not
made of the things which appear," that is, which begin
to be seen by us in the act of creation. We were not
spectators of creation; it is by faith we perceive it.
4. more excellent sacrifice--because
offered in faith. Now faith must have some
revelation of God on which it fastens. The
revelation in this case was doubtless God's command to
sacrifice animals ("the firstlings of the flock")
in token of the forfeiture of men's life by sin, and as a
type of the promised bruiser of the serpent's head (@Ge
3:15), the one coming sacrifice: this command is
implied in God's having made coats of skin for Adam and
Eve (@Ge
3:21): for these skins must have been taken from
animals slain in sacrifice: inasmuch as it was not
for food they were slain, animal food not being
permitted till after the flood; nor for mere clothing,
as, were it so, clothes might have been made of the
fleeces without the needless cruelty of killing the
animal; but a coat of skin put on Adam from a sacrificed
animal typified the covering or atonement (the Hebrew
for atone means to cover) resulting from
Christ's sacrifice. The Greek is more literally
rendered [KENNICOTT]
by WYCLIFFE,
"a much more sacrifice"; and by Queen Elizabeth's
version "a greater sacrifice." A fuller, more ample
sacrifice, that which partook more largely and essentially
of the true nature and virtue of sacrifice [ARCHBISHOP
MAGEE]. It
was not any intrinsic merit in "the firstling of the
flock" above "the fruit of the ground." It was God's
appointment that gave it all its excellency as a
sacrifice; if it had not been so, it would have been a
presumptuous act of will-worship (@Col
2:23), and taking of a life which man had no right
over before the flood (@Ge
9:1-6). The sacrifice seems to have been a holocaust,
and the sign of the divine acceptance of it was probably
the consumption of it by fire from heaven (@Ge
15:17). Hence, "to accept" a burnt sacrifice is in
Hebrew "to turn it to ashes" (@Ps
20:3, Margin). A flame seems to have issued
from the Shekinah, or flaming cherubim, east of Eden ("the
presence of the Lord," @Ge
4:16), where the first sacrifices were offered. Cain,
in unbelieving self-righteousness, presented merely a
thank offering, not like Abel feeling his need of the
propitiatory sacrifice appointed on account of sin. God
"had respect (first) unto Abel, and (then) to his
offering" (@Ge
4:4). Faith causes the believer's person to be
accepted, and then his offering. Even an animal sacrifice,
though of God's appointment, would not have been accepted,
had it not been offered in faith.
he obtained witness--God by fire
attesting His acceptance of him as "righteous by faith."
his gifts--the common term for sacrifices,
implying that they must be freely given.
by it--by faith exhibited in his animal
sacrifice.
dead, yet speaketh--His blood crying front
the ground to God, shows how precious, because of his
"faith," he was still in God's sight, even when dead. So
he becomes a witness to us of the blessed effects of
faith.
5. Faith was the
ground of his pleasing God; and his pleasing God
was the ground of his translation.
translated--(@Ge
5:22,24). Implying a sudden removal (the same
Greek as in @Ga
1:6) from mortality without death to immortality: such
a CHANGE as
shall pass over the living at Christ's coming (@1Co
15:51,52).
had this testimony--namely of Scripture; the
Greek perfect implies that this testimony continues
still: "he has been testified of."
pleased God--The Scripture testimony
virtually expresses that he pleased God, namely,
"Enoch walked with God." The Septuagint translates
the Hebrew for "walked with God," @Ge
6:9, pleased God.
6. without--Greek, "apart
from faith": if one be destitute of faith (compare @Ro
14:23).
to please--Translate, as ALFORD
does, the Greek aorist, "It is impossible to please
God at all" (@Ro
8:8). Natural amiabilities and "works done before the
grace of Christ are not pleasant to God, forasmuch as they
spring not of faith in Jesus Christ; yea, rather, for that
they are not done as God hath willed them to be done, we
doubt not but they have the nature of sin" [Article XIII,
Book of Common Prayer]. Works not rooted in God are
splendid sins [AUGUSTINE].
he that cometh to God--as a worshipper (@Heb
7:19).
must believe--once for all: Greek
aorist tense.
that God is--is the true self-existing
Jehovah (as contrasted with all so-called gods, not gods,
@Ga
4:8), the source of all being, though he sees Him not
(@Heb
11:1) as being "invisible" (@Heb
11:27). So Enoch; this passage implies that he had not
been favored with visible appearances of God, yet
he believed in God's being, and in God's
moral government, as the Rewarder of His diligent
worshippers, in opposition to antediluvian skepticism.
Also Moses was not so favored before he left Egypt the
first time (@Heb
11:27); still he believed.
and . . . is--a different Greek verb
from the former "is." Translate, "is eventually";
proves to be; literally, "becomes."
rewarder--renderer of reward [ALFORD].
So God proved to be to Enoch. The reward is God Himself
diligently "sought" and "walked with" in partial communion
here, and to be fully enjoyed hereafter. Compare @Ge
15:1, "I am thy exceeding great reward."
of them--and them only.
diligently seek--Greek, "seek out"
God. Compare "seek early," @Pr
8:17. Not only "ask" and "seek," but "knock," @Mt
7:7; compare @Heb
11:12 Lu 13:24, "Strive" as in an agony of contest.
7. warned of God--The same
Greek, @Heb
8:5, "admonished of God."
moved with fear--not mere slavish fear, but
as in @Heb
5:7; see on Heb 5:7; Greek, "reverential fear":
opposed to the world's sneering disbelief of the
revelation, and self-deceiving security. Join "by faith"
with "prepared an ark" (@1Pe
3:20).
by the which--faith.
condemned the world--For since he believed
and was saved, so might they have believed and been saved,
so that their condemnation by God is by his case shown to
be just.
righteousness which is by faith--Greek,
"according to faith." A Pauline thought. Noah is first
called "righteous" in @Ge
6:9. Christ calls Abel so, @Mt
23:35. Compare as to Noah's righteousness, @Eze
14:14,20 2Pe 2:5, "a preacher of righteousness." Paul
here makes faith the principle and ground of his
righteousness.
heir--the consequence of sonship which flows
from faith.
8. From the antediluvian
saints he passes to the patriarchs of Israel, to whom "the
promises" belonged.
called--by God (@Ge
12:1). The oldest manuscripts and Vulgate read,
"He that was called Abraham," his name being changed from
Abram to Abraham, on the occasion of God's making with him
and his seed a covenant sealed by circumcision, many years
after his call out of Ur. "By faith, he who was
(afterwards) called Abraham (father of nations, @Ge
17:5, in order to become which was the design of God's
bringing him out of Ur) obeyed (the command of God: to be
understood in this reading), so as to go out," &c.
which he should after receive--He had not
fully received even this promise when he went out, for it
was not explicitly given him till he had reached
Canaan (@Ge
12:1,6,7). When the promise of the land was given him
the Canaanite was still in the land, and himself a
stranger; it is in the new heaven and new earth that he
shall receive his personal inheritance promised him; so
believers sojourn on earth as strangers, while the ungodly
and Satan lord it over the earth; but at Christ's coming
that same earth which was the scene of the believer's
conflict shall be the inheritance of Christ and His
saints.
9. sojourned--as a
"stranger and pilgrim."
in--Greek, "into," that is, he went
into it and sojourned there.
as in a strange country--a country not
belonging to him, but to others (so the Greek),
@Ac
7:5,6.
dwelling in tabernacles--tents: as
strangers and sojourners do: moving from place
to place, as having no fixed possession of their own. In
contrast to the abiding "city" (@Heb
11:10).
with--Their kind of dwelling being the same
is a proof that their faith was the same. They all alike
were content to wait for their good things hereafter (@Lu
16:25). Jacob was fifteen years old at the death of
Abraham.
heirs with him of the same promise--Isaac did
not inherit it from Abraham, nor Jacob from Isaac, but
they all inherited it from God directly as "fellow heirs."
In @Heb
6:12,15,17, "the promise" means the thing promised
as a thing in part already attained; but in this
chapter "the promise" is of something still future.
However, see on Heb 6:12.
10. looked for--Greek,
"he was expecting"; waiting for with eager expectation (@Ro
8:19).
a city--Greek, "the city,"
already alluded to. Worldly Enoch, son of the murderer
Cain, was the first to build his city here: the godly
patriarchs waited for their city hereafter (@Heb
11:16 12:22 13:14).
foundations--Greek, "the
foundations" which the tents had not, nor even
men's present cities have.
whose builder and maker--Greek, "designer
[@Eph
1:4,11] and master-builder," or executor of the
design. The city is worthy of its Framer and Builder
(compare @Heb
11:16 Heb 8:2). Compare Note, see on Heb 9:12,"
on "found."
11. also Sara herself--though
being the weaker vessel, and though at first she doubted.
was delivered of a child--omitted in the
oldest manuscripts: then translate, "and that when she was
past age" (@Ro
4:19).
she judged him faithful who had promised--after
she had ceased to doubt, being instructed by the angel
that it was no jest, but a matter in serious earnest.
12. as good as dead--literally,
"deadened"; no longer having, as in youth, energetic vital
powers.
stars . . . sand--(@Ge
22:17).
13-16. Summary of the
characteristic excellencies of the patriarchs' faith
died in faith--died as believers,
waiting for, not actually seeing as yet their good
things promised to them. They were true to this principle
of faith even unto, and especially in, their dying
hour (compare @Heb
11:20).
These all--beginning with "Abraham" (@Heb
11:8), to whom the promises were made (@Ga
3:16), and who is alluded to in the end of @Heb
11:13 and in @Heb
11:15 [BENGEL
and ALFORD].
But the "ALL"
can hardly but include Abel, Enoch, and Noah. Now as these
did not receive the promise of entering literal Canaan,
some other promise made in the first ages, and often
repeated, must be that meant, namely, the promise of a
coming Redeemer made to Adam, namely, "the seed of the
woman shall bruise the serpent's head." Thus the promises
cannot have been merely temporal, for Abel and Enoch
mentioned here received no temporal promise [ARCHBISHOP
MAGEE]. This
promise of eternal redemption is the inner essence of the
promises made to Abraham (@Ga
3:16).
not having received--It was this that
constituted their "faith." If they had "received"
THE THING PROMISED
(so "the promises" here mean: the plural is used because
of the frequent renewal of the promise to the
patriarchs: @Heb
11:17 says he did receive the promises,
but not the thing promised), it would have been
sight, not faith.
seen them afar off--(@Joh
8:56). Christ, as the Word, was preached to the Old
Testament believers, and so became the seed of life to
their souls, as He is to ours.
and were persuaded of them--The oldest
manuscripts omit this clause.
embraced them--as though they were not "afar
off," but within reach, so as to draw them to themselves
and clasp them in their embrace. TRENCH
denies that the Old Testament believers embraced
them, for they only saw them afar off: he
translates, "saluted them," as the homeward-bound mariner,
recognizing from afar the well-known promontories of his
native land. ALFORD
translates, "greeted them." Jacob's exclamation, "I
have waited for Thy salvation, O Lord" (@Ge
49:18) is such a greeting of salvation from
afar [DELITZSCH].
confessed . . . were strangers--so Abraham to
the children of Heth (@Ge
23:4); and Jacob to Pharaoh (@Ge
47:9 Ps 119:19). Worldly men hold fast the world;
believers sit loose to it. Citizens of the world do
not confess themselves "strangers on the earth."
pilgrims--Greek, "temporary
(literally, 'by the way') sojourners."
on the earth--contrasted with "an heavenly"
(@Heb
11:16): "our citizenship is in heaven" (Greek:
@Heb
10:34 Ps 119:54 Php 3:20). "Whosoever professes that
he has a Father in heaven, confesses himself a stranger on
earth; hence there is in the heart an ardent longing, like
that of a child living among strangers, in want and grief,
far from his fatherland" [LUTHER].
"Like ships in seas while in, above the world."
14. For--proof that "faith"
(@Heb
11:13) was their actuating principle.
declare plainly--make it plainly evident.
seek--Greek, "seek after";
implying the direction towards which their desires ever
tend.
a country--rather as Greek, "a
fatherland." In confessing themselves strangers
here, they evidently imply that they regard not this as
their home or fatherland, but seek after another and a
better.
15. As Abraham, had he
desired to leave his pilgrim life in Canaan, and resume
his former fixed habitation in Ur, among the carnal and
worldly, had in his long life ample opportunities to have
done so; and so spiritually, as to all believers who came
out from the world to become God's people, they might, if
they had been so minded, have easily gone back.
16. Proving the truth that
the old fathers did not, as some assert, "look only for
transitory promises" [Article VII, Book of Common
Prayer].
now--as the case is.
is not ashamed--Greek, "Is not ashamed
of them." Not merely once did God call himself their
God, but He is NOW not ashamed to have Himself called
so, they being alive and abiding with Him where He
is. For, by the law, God cannot come into contact with
anything dead. None remained dead in Christ's presence (@Lu
20:37,38). He who is Lord and Maker of heaven and
earth, and all things therein, when asked, What is Thy
name? said, omitting all His other titles, "I am the God
of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob" [THEODORET].
Not only is He not ashamed, but glories in the name
and relation to His people. The "wherefore" does not mean
that God's good pleasure is the meritorious, but
the gracious, consequence of their obedience (that
obedience being the result of His Spirit's work in them in
the first instance). He first so "called" Himself, then
they so called Him.
for--proof of His being "their God,"
namely, "He hath prepared (in His eternal counsels, @Mt
20:23 25:34, and by the progressive acts of
redemption, @Joh
14:2) for them a city," the city in which He Himself
reigns, so that their yearning desires shall not be
disappointed (@Heb
11:14,16).
a city--on its garniture by God (compare @Re
21:10-27).
17. offered up--literally,
"hath offered up," as if the work and its praise were yet
enduring [ALFORD].
As far as His intention was concerned, he did sacrifice
Isaac; and in actual fact "he offered him," as far as the
presentation of him on the altar as an offering to God is
concerned.
tried--Greek, "tempted," as in @Ge
22:1. Put to the proof of his faith. Not that
God "tempts" to sin, but God "tempts" in the sense
of proving or trying (@Jas
1:13-15).
and--and so.
he that had received--rather as Greek,
"accepted," that is, welcomed and embraced by
faith, not merely "had the promises," as in @Heb
7:6. This added to the difficulty in the way of his
faith, that it was in Isaac's posterity the promises were
to be fulfilled; how then could they be fulfilled if Isaac
were sacrificed?
offered up--rather as Greek, "was
offering up"; he was in the act of offering.
his only-begotten son--Compare @Ge
22:2, "Take now thy son, thine only son." EUSEBIUS
[The Preparation of the Gospel, 1.10, and 4.16],
has preserved a fragment of a Greek translation of
Sanchoniatho, which mentions a mystical sacrifice of the
Phoenicians, wherein a prince in royal robes was the
offerer, and his only son was to be the victim: this
evidently was a tradition derived from Abraham's offering,
and handed down through Esau or Edom, Isaac's son. Isaac
was Abraham's "only-begotten son" in respect of Sarah and
the promises: he sent away his other sons, by other wives
(@Ge
25:6). Abraham is a type of the Father not sparing His
only-begotten Son to fulfil the divine purpose of love.
God nowhere in the Mosaic law allowed human sacrifices,
though He claimed the first-born of Israel as His.
18. Of whom--rather as
Greek "He (Abraham, not Isaac) TO whom it was
said" [ALFORD].
BENGEL
supports English Version. So @Heb
1:7 uses the same Greek preposition, "unto,"
for "in respect to," or "of." This verse gives a
definition of the "only-begotten Son" (@Heb
11:17).
in Isaac shall thy seed be called--(@Ge
21:12). The posterity of Isaac alone shall be
accounted as the seed of Abraham, which is the heir of the
promises (@Ro
9:7).
19. Faith answered the
objections which reason brought against God's command to
Abraham to offer Isaac, by suggesting that what God had
promised He both could and would perform, however
impossible the performance might seem (@Ro
4:20,21).
able to raise him--rather, in general,
"able to raise from the dead." Compare @Ro
4:17, "God who quickeneth the dead." The quickening Of
Sarah's dead womb suggested the thought of God's power to
raise even the dead, though no instance of it had as yet
occurred.
he received him--"received him back" [ALFORD].
in a figure--Greek, "in a parable." ALFORD
explains, "Received him back, risen from that death which
he had undergone in, under, the figure of the ram."
I prefer with BISHOP
PEARSON, ESTIUS,
and GREGORY OF
NYSSA,
understanding the figure to be the representation
which the whole scene gave to Abraham of Christ in His
death (typified by Isaac's offering in intention, and the
ram's actual substitution answering to Christ's vicarious
death), and in His resurrection (typified by Abraham's
receiving him back alive from the jaws of death, compare @2Co
1:9,10); just as on the day of atonement the slain
goat and the scapegoat together formed one joint rite
representing Christ's death and resurrection. It was then
that Abraham saw Christ's day (@Joh
8:56): accounting God was able to raise even from the
dead: from which state of the dead he received him back
as a type of the resurrection in
Christ.
20. Jacob is put before
Esau, as heir of the chief, namely, the spiritual
blessing.
concerning things to come--Greek, "even
concerning things to come": not only concerning things
present. Isaac, by faith, assigned to his sons
things future, as if they were present.
21. both the sons--Greek,
"each of the sons" (@Ge
47:29,48:8-20). He knew not Joseph's sons, and could
not distinguish them by sight, yet he did distinguish
them by faith, transposing his hands intentionally, so
as to lay his right hand on the younger, Ephraim, whose
posterity was to be greater than that of Manasseh: he also
adopted these grandchildren as his own sons, after having
transferred the right of primogeniture to Joseph (@Ge
48:22).
and worshipped--This did not take place in
immediate connection with the foregoing, but before it,
when Jacob made Joseph swear that he would bury him with
his fathers in Canaan, not in Egypt. The assurance that
Joseph would do so filled him with pious gratitude to God,
which he expressed by raising himself on his bed to an
attitude of worship. His faith, as Joseph's (@Heb
11:22), consisted in his so confidentially
anticipating the fulfilment of God's promise of Canaan to
his descendants, as to desire to be buried there as his
proper possession.
leaning upon the top of his staff--@Ge
47:31, Hebrew and English Version, "upon
the bed's head." The Septuagint translates as Paul
here. JEROME
justly reprobates the notion of modern Rome, that Jacob
worshipped the top of Joseph's staff, having on it an
image of Joseph's power, to which Jacob bowed in
recognition of the future sovereignty of his son's tribe,
the father bowing to the son! The Hebrew, as
translated in English Version, sets it aside:
the bed is alluded to afterwards (@Ge
48:2 49:33), and it is likely that Jacob turned
himself in his bed so as to have his face toward
the pillow, @Isa
38:2 (there were no bedsteads in the East).
Paul by adopting the Septuagint version, brings
out, under the Spirit, an additional fact, namely,
that the aged patriarch used his own (not Joseph's)
staff to lean on in worshipping on his bed. The
staff, too, was the emblem of his pilgrim state
here on his way to his heavenly city (@Heb
11:13,14), wherein God had so wonderfully supported
him. @Ge
32:10, "With my staff I passed over Jordan, and
now I am become," &c. (compare @Ex
12:11 Mr 6:8). In @1Ki
1:47, the same thing is said of David's "bowing on his
bed," an act of adoring thanksgiving to God for God's
favor to his son before death. He omits the more leading
blessing of the twelve sons of Jacob; because "he plucks
only the flowers which stand by his way, and leaves the
whole meadow full to his readers" [DELITZSCH
in ALFORD].
22. when he died--"when
dying."
the departing--"the exodus" (@Ge
50:24,25). Joseph's eminent position in Egypt did not
make him regard it as his home: in faith he looked to
God's promise of Canaan being fulfilled and desired that
his bones should rest there: testifying thus: (1) that he
had no doubt of his posterity obtaining the promised land:
and (2) that he believed in the resurrection of the body,
and the enjoyment in it of the heavenly Canaan. His wish
was fulfilled (@Jos
24:32 Ac 4:16).
23. parents--So the
Septuagint has the plural, namely, Amram and Jochebed
(@Nu
26:59); but in @Ex
2:2, the mother alone is mentioned; but doubtless
Amram sanctioned all she did, and secrecy. being their
object, he did not appear prominent in what was done.
a proper child--Greek, "a comely
child." @Ac
7:20, "exceeding fair," Greek, "fair to God."
The "faith" of his parents in saving the child must have
had some divine revelation to rest on (probably at the
time of his birth), which marked their "exceeding fair"
babe as one whom God designed to do a great work by. His
beauty was probably "the sign" appointed by God to
assure their faith.
the king's commandment--to slay all the males
(@Ex
1:22).
24. So far from faith
being opposed to Moses, he was an eminent example
of it [BENGEL].
refused--in believing self-denial, when he
might possibly have succeeded at last to the throne of
Egypt. Thermutis, Pharaoh's daughter, according to the
tradition which Paul under the Spirit sanctions, adopted
him, as JOSEPHUS
says, with the consent of the king. JOSEPHUS states that
when a child, he threw on the ground the diadem put on him
in jest, a presage of his subsequent formal rejection of
Thermutis' adoption of him. Faith made him to prefer the
adoption of the King of kings, unseen, and so to choose (@Heb
11:25,26) things, the very last which flesh and blood
relish.
25. He balanced the best of
the world with the worst of religion, and decidedly chose
the latter. "Choosing" implies a deliberate resolution,
not a hasty impulse. He was forty years old, a time when
the judgment is matured.
for a season--If the world has "pleasure" (Greek,
"enjoyment") to offer, it is but "for a season." If
religion bring with it "affliction," it too is but for a
season; whereas its "pleasures are for evermore."
26. Esteeming--Inasmuch as
he esteemed.
the reproach of Christ--that is, the reproach
which falls on the Church, and which Christ regards as His
own reproach, He being the Head, and the Church (both of
the Old and New Testament) His body. Israel typified
Christ; Israel's sufferings were Christ's sufferings
(compare @2Co
1:5 Col 1:24). As uncircumcision was Egypt's
reproach, so circumcision was the badge of Israel's
expectation of Christ, which Moses especially cherished,
and which the Gentiles reproached Israel on account of.
Christ's people's reproach will ere long be their great
glory.
had respect unto, &c.--Greek, "turning
his eyes away from other considerations, he fixed
them on the (eternal) recompense" (@Heb
11:39,40).
27. not fearing the wrath of
the king--But in @Ex
2:14 it is said, "Moses feared, and fled from the face
of Pharaoh." He was afraid, and fled from the
danger where no duty called him to stay (to have stayed
without call of duty would have been to tempt Providence,
and to sacrifice his hope of being Israel's future
deliverer according to the divine intimations; his
great aim, see on Heb 11:23). He did not fear the king
so as to neglect his duty and not return when God called
him. It was in spite of the king's prohibition he left
Egypt, not fearing the consequences which were likely
to overtake him if he should be caught, after having, in
defiance of the king, left Egypt. If he had stayed and
resumed his position as adopted son of Pharaoh's daughter,
his slaughter of the Egyptian would doubtless have been
connived at; but his resolution to take his portion with
oppressed Israel, which he could not have done had he
stayed, was the motive of his flight, and constituted the
"faith" of this act, according to the express statement
here. The exodus of Moses with Israel cannot be meant
here, for it was made, not in defiance, but by the desire,
of the king. Besides, the chronological order would be
broken thus, the next particular specified here, namely,
the institution of the Passover, having taken place
before the exodus. Besides, it is Moses'
personal history and faith which are here described.
The faith of the people ("THEY
passed") is not introduced till @Heb
11:29.
endured--steadfast in faith amidst trials. He
had fled, not so much from fear of Pharaoh,
as from a revulsion of feeling in finding God's people
insensible to their high destiny, and from disappointment
at not having been able to inspire them with those hopes
for which he had sacrificed all his earthly prospects.
This accounts for his strange reluctance and despondency
when commissioned by God to go and arouse the people (@Ex
3:15 4:1,10-12).
seeing him . . . invisible--as though he had
not to do with men, but only with God, ever before his
eyes by faith, though invisible to the bodily eye
(@Ro
1:20 1Ti 1:17 6:16). Hence he feared not the wrath of
visible man; the characteristic of faith (@Heb
11:1 Lu 12:4,5).
28. kept--Greek, "hath
kept," the Passover being, in Paul's day, still observed.
His faith here was his belief in the invisible
God's promise that the destroying angel should pass
over, and not touch the inmates of the
blood-sprinkled houses (@Ex
12:23). "He acquiesced in the bare word of God where
the thing itself was not apparent" [CALVIN].
the first-born--Greek neuter;
both of man and beast.
29. they--Moses and Israel.
Red Sea--called so from its red seaweed, or
rather from Edom (meaning "red"), whose country adjoined
it.
which . . . assaying to do--Greek, "of
which (Red Sea) the Egyptians having made experiment."
Rashness and presumption mistaken by many for
faith; with similar rash presumption many rush into
eternity. The same thing when done by the believer, and
when done by the unbeliever, is not the same thing [BENGEL].
What was faith in Israel, was presumption in
the Egyptians.
were drowned--Greek, "were swallowed
up," or "engulfed." They sank in the sands as much as in
the waves of the Red Sea. Compare @Ex
15:12, "the earth swallowed them."
30. The soundings of
trumpets, though one were to sound for ten thousand years,
cannot throw down walls, but faith can do all
things [CHRYSOSTOM].
seven days--whereas sieges often lasted for
years.
31. Rahab showed her
"faith" in her confession, @Jos
2:9,11, "I know that Jehovah hath given you the land;
Jehovah your God, is God in heaven above, and in earth
beneath."
the harlot--Her former life adds to the
marvel of her repentance, faith, and preservation (@Mt
21:31-32).
believed not--Greek, "were
disobedient," namely, to the will of God manifested by the
miracles wrought in behalf of Israel (@Jos
2:8-11).
received--in her house (@Jos
2:1,4,6).
with peace--peaceably; so that they had
nothing to fear in her house. Thus Paul, quoting the same
examples (@Heb
11:17,31) for the power of faith, as James (@Jas
2:21,25; see on Jas 2:21; Jas 2:25) does for
justification by works evidentially, shows that in
maintaining justification by faith alone, he means not a
dead faith, but "faith which worketh by love" (@Ga
5:6).
32. the time--suitable for
the length of an Epistle. He accumulates collectively some
out of many examples of faith.
Gideon--put before Barak, not
chronologically, but as being more celebrated. Just as
Samson for the same reason is put before Jephthæ. The
mention of Jephthæ as an example of "faith," makes it
unlikely he sacrificed the life of his daughter for
a rash vow. David, the warrior king and prophet, forms the
transition from warrior chiefs to the "prophets," of whom
"Samuel" is mentioned as the first.
33. subdued kingdoms--as
David did (@2Sa
8:1, &c.); so also Gideon subdued Midian (@Jud
7:1-25).
wrought righteousness--as Samuel did (@1Sa
8:9 12:3-23 15:33); and David (@2Sa
8:15).
obtained promises--as "the prophets" (@Heb
11:32) did; for through them the promises were given
(compare @Da
9:21) [BENGEL].
Rather, "obtained the fulfilment of promises,"
which had been previously the object of their faith
(@Jos
21:45 1Ki 8:56). Indeed, Gideon, Barak, &c., also
obtained the things which God promised. Not "the
promises," which are still future (@Heb
11:13,39).
stopped the mouths of lions--Note the words,
"because he believed in his God." Also Samson (@Jud
14:6), David (@1Sa
17:34-37), Benaiah (@2Sa
23:20).
34. Quenched the violence of
fire--(@Da
3:27). Not merely "quenched the fire," but "quenched
the power (so the Greek) of the fire." @Da
3:19-30 and @Da
6:12-23 record the last miracles of the Old Testament.
So the martyrs of the Reformation, though not escaping
the fire, were delivered from its having power
really or lastingly to hurt them.
escaped . . . sword--So Jephthah (@Jud
12:3); and so David escaped Saul's sword (@1Sa
18:11 19:10,12); Elijah (@1Ki
19:1, &c. @2Ki
6:14).
out of weakness . . . made strong--Samson (@Jud
16:28 15:19). Hezekiah (@Isa
37:1-38:22). MILTON
says of the martyrs, "They shook the powers of darkness
with the irresistible power of weakness."
valiant in fight--Barak (@Jud
4:14,15). And the Maccabees, the sons of Matthias,
Judas, Jonathan, and Simon, who delivered the Jews from
their cruel oppressor, Antiochus of Syria.
armies--literally, "camps" referring to @Jud
7:21. But the reference may be to the Maccabees having
put to flight the Syrians and other foes.
35. Women received their dead
raised--as the widow of Zarephath (@1Ki
17:17-24). The Shunammite (@2Ki
4:17-35). The two oldest manuscripts read. "They
received women of aliens by raising their dead." @1Ki
17:24 shows that the raising of the widow's son by
Elijah led her to the faith, so that he thus took
her into fellowship, an alien though she was.
Christ, in @Lu
4:26, makes especial mention of the fact that Elijah
was sent to an alien from Israel, a woman of Sarepta. Thus
Paul may quote this as an instance of Elijah's faith, that
at God's command he went to a Gentile city of Sidonia
(contrary to Jewish prejudices), and there, as the fruit
of faith, not only raised her dead son, but received
her as a convert into the family of God, as Vulgate
reads. Still, English Version may be the right
reading.
and--Greek, "but"; in contrast to
those raised again to life.
tortured--"broken on the wheel." Eleazar (2
Maccabees 6:18, end; 2 Maccabees 19:20,30). The sufferer
was stretched on an instrument like a drumhead and
scourged to death.
not accepting deliverance--when offered to
them. So the seven brothers, 2 Maccabees 7:9,11,14,29,36;
and Eleazar, 2 Maccabees 6:21,28,30, "Though I might have
been delivered from death, I endure these severe pains,
being beaten."
a better resurrection--than that of the
women's children "raised to life again"; or, than the
resurrection which their foes could give them by
delivering them from death (@Da
12:2 Lu 20:35 Php 3:11). The fourth of the brethren
(referring to @Da
12:2) said to King Antiochus, "To be put to death by
men, is to be chosen to look onward for the hopes which
are of God, to be raised up again by Him; but for thee
there is no resurrection to life." The writer of Second
Maccabees expressly disclaims inspiration, which
prevents our mistaking Paul's allusion here to it as if it
sanctioned the Apocrypha as inspired. In quoting Daniel,
he quotes a book claiming inspiration, and so
tacitly sanctions that claim.
36. others--of a
different class of confessors for the truth (the
Greek is different from that for "others," @Heb
11:35, alloi, heteroi).
trial--testing their faith.
imprisonment--as Hanani (@2Ch
16:10), imprisoned by Asa. Micaiah, the son of Imlah,
by Ahab (@1Ki
22:26,27).
37. stoned--as Zechariah,
son of Jehoiada (@2Ch
24:20-22 Mt 23:35).
sawn asunder--as Isaiah was said to have been
by Manasseh; but see my Introduction to Isaiah.
tempted--by their foes, in the midst
of their tortures, to renounce their faith; the most
bitter aggravation of them. Or else, by those of their
own household, as Job was [ESTIUS];
or by the fiery darts of Satan, as Jesus was in His last
trials [GLASSIUS].
Probably it included all three; they were tempted
in every possible way, by friends and foes, by human and
satanic agents, by caresses and afflictions, by words and
deeds, to forsake God, but in vain, through the power of
faith.
sword--literally, "they died in the murder of
the sword." In @Heb
11:34 the contrary is given as an effect of faith,
"they escaped the edge of the sword." Both alike are
marvellous effects of faith. In both accomplishes great
things and suffers great things, without counting it
suffering [CHRYSOSTOM].
Urijah was so slain by Jehoiakim (@Jer
26:23); and the prophets in Israel (@1Ki
19:10).
in sheepskins--as Elijah (@1Ki
19:13, Septuagint). They were white; as
the "goat-skins" were black (compare @Zec
13:4).
tormented--Greek, "in evil state."
38. Of whom the world was not
worthy--So far from their being unworthy of living in
the world, as their exile in deserts, &c., might seem to
imply, "the world was not worthy of them." The world, in
shutting them out, shut out from itself a source of
blessing; such as Joseph proved to Potiphar (@Ge
39:5), and Jacob to Laban (@Ge
30:27). In condemning them, the world condemned
itself.
caves--literally, "chinks." Palestine, from
its hilly character, abounds in fissures and caves,
affording shelter to the persecuted, as the fifty hid by
Obadiah (@1Ki
18:4,13) and Elijah (@1Ki
19:8,13); and Mattathias and his sons (1 Maccabees
2:28,29); and Judas Maccabeus (2 Maccabees 5:27).
39. having obtained a good
report--Greek, "being borne witness of."
Though they were so, yet "they received not the
promise," that is, the final completion of
"salvation" promised at Christ's coming again (@Heb
9:28); "the eternal inheritance" (@Heb
9:15). Abraham did obtain the very thing
promised (@Heb
6:15) in part, namely, blessedness in soul
after death, by virtue of faith in Christ about to come.
The full blessedness of body and soul shall not be
till the full number of the elect shall be accomplished,
and all together, no one preceding the other, shall enter
on the full glory and bliss. Moreover, in another point of
view, "It is probable that some accumulation of
blessedness was added to holy souls, when Christ came and
fulfilled all things even as at His burial many rose from
the dead, who doubtless ascended to heaven with Him" [FLACIUS
in BENGEL].
(Compare Note, see on Eph 4:8). The perfecting
of believers in title, and in respect to conscience, took
place once for all, at the death of Christ, by virtue of
His being made by death perfect as Saviour. Their
perfecting in soul at, and ever after Christ's
death, took place, and takes place at their death. But the
universal and final perfecting will not take place till
Christ's coming.
40. provided--with divine
forethought from eternity (compare @Ge
22:8,14).
some better thing for us--(@Heb
7:19); than they had here. They had not in this world,
"apart from us" (so the Greek is for "without us,"
that is, they had to wait for us for), the clear
revelation of the promised salvation actually
accomplished, as we now have it in Christ; in their state,
beyond the grave their souls also seem to have
attained an increase of heavenly bliss on the death
and ascension of Christ; and they shall not attain the
full and final glory in body and soul (the
regeneration of the creature), until the full number of
the elect (including us with them) is completed. The
Fathers, CHRYSOSTOM,
&c., restricted the meaning of @Heb
11:39,40 to this last truth, and I incline to this
view. "The connection is, You, Hebrews, may far more
easily exercise patience than Old Testament believers; for
they had much longer to wait, and are still waiting until
the elect are all gathered in; you, on the contrary, have
not to wait for them" [ESTIUS].
I think his object in these verses (@Heb
11:39,40) is to warn Hebrew Christians against their
tendency to relapse into Judaism. "Though the Old
Testament worthies attained such eminence by faith, they
are not above us in privileges, but the reverse." It is
not we who are perfected with them, but
rather they with us. They waited for His
coming; we enjoy Him as having come (@Heb
1:1 2:3). Christ's death, the means of perfecting
what the Jewish law could not perfect, was reserved
for our time. Compare @Heb
12:2, "perfecter (Greek) of our faith."
Now that Christ is come, they in soul share our
blessedness, being "the spirits of the just made perfect"
(@Heb
12:23); so ALFORD;
however, see on Heb 12:23. @Heb
9:12 shows that the blood of Christ, brought into the
heavenly holy place by Him, first opened an entrance into
heaven (compare @Joh
3:13). Still, the fathers were in blessedness by faith
in the Saviour to come, at death (@Heb
6:15 Lu 16:22).
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