CHAPTER XI.
ANALYSIS OF THE CHAPTER.
In the close of the previous chapter the apostle had incidentally
made mention of faith, Hebrews 10:38,39, and said that the just should
live by faith. The object of the whole argument in this epistle was
to keep those to whom it was addressed from apostatizing, from the
Christian religion, and especially from relapsing again into Judaism.
They were in the midst of trials, and were evidently suffering some
form of persecution, the tendency of which was to expose them
to the danger of relapsing. The indispensable means of securing
them from apostasy was faith; and with a view to show its efficacy
in this respect, the apostle goes into an extended account of its
nature and effects, occupying this entire chapter. As the persons
whom he addressed had been Hebrews, and as the Old Testament
contained an account of numerous instances of persons in substantially
the same circumstances in which they were, the reference is
made, to the illustrious examples of the efficacy of faith in the Jewish
history. The object is to show that faith, or confidence in the
Divine promises, has been in all ages the means of perseverance in
the true religion, and consequently of salvation. In this chapter,
therefore, the apostle first describes or defines the nature of faith,
(Hebrews 11:1,) and then illustrates its efficacy and power by reference
to numerous instances, Hebrews 11:2-40. In these illustrations he refers
to the steady belief which we have that God made the worlds, and
then to the examples of Abel, Enoch, Noah, Abraham, Sarah, Isaac,
Jacob, Joseph, Moses, and Rahab in particular, and then to numerous other
examples without mentioning their names. The object is to show that there
is power in faith to keep tile mind and heart in the midst of trials, and
that, having these examples before them, those whom he addressed should
continue to adhere steadfastly to the profession of the true religion.
Verse 1. Now faith is the substance of things hoped for. On the
general nature of faith, See Barnes "Mark 16:10". The margin here is,
"ground, or confidence." There is scarcely any verse of the New
Testament more important than this, for it states what is the nature
of all true faith, and is the only definition of it which is attempted
in the Scriptures. Eternal life depends on the existence and exercise of
faith, (Mark 16:16,) and hence the importance of an accurate
understanding of its nature. The word rendered substance
--\~upostasiv\~--occurs in the New Testament only in the following places. In
2 Corinthians 9:4; 11:17; Hebrews 3:14, where it is rendered confident and
confidence; and in Hebrews 1:3, where it is rendered person, and
in the passage before us. Comp. See Barnes " :". Prof. Stuart
renders it here confidence; Chrysostom, "Faith gives reality or
substance to things hoped for." The word properly means that which
is placed under, (Germ. Unterstellen;) then ground, basis,
foundation, support. Then it means, also. reality, substance,
existence, in contradistinction from that which is unreal,
imaginary, or deceptive, (tauschung.) Passow. It seems to me,
therefore, that the word here has reference to something which
imparts reality in the view of the mind to those things which are
not seen, and which serves to distinguish them from those things
which are unreal and illusive. It is that which enables us to feel
and act as if they were real, or which causes them to exert an
influence over us as if we saw them. Faith does this on all other
subjects as well as religion. A belief that there is such a place
as London or Calcutta, leads us to act as if this were so, if we
have occasion to go to either; a belief that money may be made
in a certain undertaking, leads men to act as if this were so: a
belief in the veracity of another leads us to act as if this were
so. As long as the faith continues, whether it be well-founded or not,
it gives all the force of reality to that which is believed. We feel and
act just as if it were so, or as if we saw the object before our
eyes. This, I think, is the clear meaning here. We do not see the things
of eternity. We do not see God, or heaven, or the angels, or the
redeemed in glory, or the crowns of victory, or the harps of praise;
but we have faith in them, and this leads us to act as if we saw
them. And this is, undoubtedly, the fact in regard to all who live
by faith, and who are fairly under its influence.
Of things hoped for. In heaven. Faith gives them reality in the view
of the mind. The Christian hopes to be admitted into heaven; to be raised
up in the last day from the slumbers of the tomb; to be made perfectly
free from sin; to be everlastingly happy. Under the influence of
faith he allows these things to control his mind as if they were a
most affecting reality.
The evidence of things not seen. Of the existence of God; of heaven;
of angels; of the glories of the world prepared for the redeemed. The
word rendered evidence \~elegcov\~ occurs in the New Testament only in
this place and in 2 Timothy 3:16, where it is rendered reproof. It
means, properly, proof, or means of proving, to wit, evidence; then proof
which convinces another of error or guilt; then vindication or defence;
then summary or contents. See Pussow. The idea of evidence which goes
to demonstrate the thing under consideration, or which is adapted
to produce conviction in the mind, seems to be the elementary idea
in the word. So when a proposition is demonstrated; when a man
is arraigned, and evidence is furnished of his guilt, or when he
establishes his innocence; or when one by argument refutes his
adversaries, the idea of convincing argument enters into the use of
the word in each case. This, I think, is clearly the meaning of the
word here. "Faith in the Divine declarations answers all the
purposes of a convincing argument, or is itself a convincing argument to
the mind, of the real existence of those things which are not seen." But
is it a good argument? Is it rational to rely on such a means of being
convinced? Is mere faith a consideration which should ever convince a
rational mind? The infidel says no; and we know there may be a faith
which is no argument of the truth of what is believed. But when a man who
has never seen it believes that there is such a place as London, his
belief in the numerous testimonies respecting it which he has heard and
read is, to his mind, a good and rational proof of its existence, and he
would act on that belief without hesitation. When a son credits
the declaration or the promise of a father who has never deceived
him, and acts as though that declaration and promise were true,
his faith is to him a ground of conviction and of action, and he
will act as if these things were so. In like manner the Christian
believes what God says. He has never seen heaven; he has never
seen an angel; he has never seen the Redeemer; he has never seen
a body raised from the grave; but he has evidence which is
satisfactory to his mind that God has spoken on these subjects, and
his very nature prompts him to confide in the declarations of his
Creator. Those declarations are, to his mind, more convincing
proof than anything else would be. They are more conclusive
evidence than would be the deductions on his own reason; far better and
more rational than all the reasonings and declarations of the infidel to
the contrary. He feels and acts, therefore, as if these things were
so--for his faith in the declarations of God has convinced him that they
are so. The object of the apostle, in this chapter, is not to illustrate
the nature of what is called saving faith, but to show the power of
unwavering confidence in God in sustaining the soul, especially in
times of trial; and particularly in leading us to act, in view of
promises and of things not seen, as if they were so. "Saving faith"
is the same kind of confidence directed to the Messiah--the Lord
Jesus--as the Saviour of the soul.
{1} "substance" "ground"
{a} "things" Romans 8:24,25
Verse 2. For by it. That is, by that faith which gives reality to
things hoped for, and a certain persuasion to the mind of the existence
of those things which are not seen.
The elders. The ancients; the Hebrew patriarchs and fathers.
Obtained a good report. Literally, "were witnessed of;" that is, an
honourable testimony was borne to them in consequence of their faith. The
idea is, that their acting under the influence of faith, in the
circumstances in which they were, was the ground of the honourable
testimony which was borne to them in the Old Testament. See this use of
the word in Hebrews 7:8, and Hebrews 11:4 of this chapter. Also
Luke 4:22; Acts 15:8. In the cases which the apostle proceeds to
enumerate in the subsequent part of the chapter, he mentions those
whose piety is particularly commended in the Old Testament, and
who showed, in trying circumstances, that they had unwavering confidence
in God.
{b} "understand" Genesis 1:1; Psalms 33:6
Verse 3. Through faith we understand that the worlds were framed. The
first instance of the strength of faith, which the apostle refers to, is
that by which we give credence to the declarations of the Scriptures
about the work of creation, Genesis 1:3, This is selected first,
evidently, because it is the first thing that occurs in the Bible,
or is the first thing there narrated in relation to which there is the
exercise of faith. He points to no particular instance in which this
faith was exercise--for none is especially mentioned--but refers to it as
an illustration of the nature of faith which every one might observe in
himself. The faith here exercised is confidence in the truth of the
Divine declarations in regard to the creation. The meaning is, that our
knowledge on this subject is a mere matter of faith in the Divine
testimony. It is not that we could reason this out, and demonstrate that
the worlds were thus made; it is not that profane history goes back to
that period and informs us of it; it is simply that God has told us so in
his word. The strength of the faith, in this case, is measured
(1.) by the fact that it is mere faith--that there is nothing else on
which to rely in the case, and
(2.) by the greatness of the truth believed. After all the acts of faith
which have ever been exercised in this world, perhaps there is none which
is really more strong, or which requires higher confidence in God, than
the declaration that this vast universe has been brought into existence
by a word!
We understand. We attain to the apprehension of; we receive and
comprehend the idea. Our knowledge of this fact is derived only from
faith, and not from our own reasoning.
That the worlds. In Genesis 1:1, it is "the heaven and the earth."
The phrase which the apostle uses denotes a plurality of worlds, and is
proof that he supposed there were other worlds besides our earth. How far
his knowledge extended on this point we have no means of ascertaining;
but there is no reason to doubt that he regarded the stars as "worlds,"
in some respects, like our own. On the meaning of the Greek word used
here, See Barnes "Hebrews 1:2". The plural form is used there also, and
in both cases, it seems to me, not without design.
Were framed. It is observable that the apostle does not here use the
word make or create. That which he does use --\~katartizw\~--means, to
put in order, to arrange, to complete, and may be applied to that which
before had an existence, and which is to be put in order or re-fitted,
Matthew 4:24; Mark 1:19; Matthew 21:16; Hebrews 10:5. The meaning here is, that they
were set in order by the word of God. This implies the act of
creation, but the specific idea is that of arranging them in the
beautiful order in which they are now. Doddridge renders it
"adjusted." Kuinoel, however, supposes that the word is used here in the
sense of form or make. It has probably about the meaning which we attach
to the phrase "fitting up anything"--as, for example, a dwelling--and
includes all the previous arrangements, though the thing which is
particularly denoted is not the making, but the arrangement. So
in the work here referred to. "We arrive at the conviction that the
universe was fitted up or arranged, in the present manner, by the word of
God."
By the word of God. This does not mean here, by the Logos, or the
second Person of the Trinity, for Paul does not use that term here or
elsewhere. The word which he employs is \~rhma\~--rema--meaning,
properly, a word spoken, and in this place command. Comp.
Genesis 1:3,6,9,11,14,20; Psalms 33:6; -"By the word of the Lord were the
heavens made; and all the host of them by the breath of his mouth." In
regard to the agency of the Son of God in the work of the creation, see
See Barnes " :"; comp. See Barnes "John 1:3".
So that things which are seen. The point of the remark here is, that
the visible creation was not moulded out of pre-existing materials, but
was made out of nothing. In reference to the grammatical construction
of the passage, see Stuart, Comm. in loc. The doctrine taught is,
that matter was not eternal; that the materials of the universe,
as well as the arrangements, were formed by God, and that all this
was done by a simple command. The argument here, so far as it is
adapted to the purpose of the apostle, seems to be, that there was
nothing which appeared, or which was to be seen, that could lay
the foundation of a belief that God made the worlds; and, in like manner,
our faith now is not to be based on what "appears," by which we could
infer or reason out what would be, but that we must exercise strong
confidence in Him who had power to create the universe out of nothing. If
this vast universe has been called into existence by the mere word of
God, there is nothing which we may not believe he has ample power to
perform.
{b} "understand" Genesis 1:1; Psalms 33:6
Verse 4. By faith Abel offered. See Genesis 4:4,5. In the account in
Genesis of the offering made by Abel, there is no mention of faith
--as is true also indeed of most of the instances referred to by the
apostle. The account in Genesis is, simply, that Abel "brought
of the firstlings of his flock and of the fat thereof. And the Lord had
respect unto Abel and to his offering." Men have speculated much
as to the reason why the offering of Abel was accepted, and that of
Cain rejected; but such speculation rests on no certain basis, and
the solution of the apostle should be regarded as decisive and
satisfactory, that in the one case there was faith, in the other not.
It could not have been because an offering of the fruits of the
ground was not pleasing to God, for such an offering was commanded under
the Jewish law, and was not in itself improper. Both the brothers
selected that which was to them most obvious; which they had reared with
their own hands; which they regarded as most valuable. Cain had
cultivated the earth, and he naturally brought what had grown under his
care; Abel kept a flock, and he as naturally brought what he had
raised: and had the temper of mind in both been the same, there is no
reason to doubt that the offering of each would have been accepted. To
this conclusion we are led by the nature of the case, and the apostle
advances substantially the same sentiment--for he says that the
particular state of mind on which the whole turned was, that the
one had faith and the other not. How the apostle himself was informed
of the fact, that it was faith which made the difference, he has not
informed us. The belief that he was inspired will, however, relieve the
subject of this difficulty--for, according to such a belief, all his
statements here, whether recorded in the Old Testament or not, are
founded in truth. It is equally impossible to tell with certainty what
was the nature of the faith of Abel. It has been commonly asserted that
it was faith in Christ---looking forward to his coming, and depending on
his sacrifice when offering that which was to be a type of him. But of
this there is no positive evidence, though, from Hebrews 12:24, it seems
to be not improbable. Sacrifice, as a type of the Redeemer's great
offering, was instituted early in the history of the world. There can be
no reason assigned for the offering of blood as an atonement for sin,
except that it had originally a reference to the great atonement
which was to be made by blood; and as the salvation of man depended on
this entirely, it is probable that that would be one of the truths which
would be first communicated to man after the fall. The bloody offering of
Abel is the first of the kind which is definitely mentioned in the
Scriptures, (though it is not improbable that such sacrifices were
offered by Adam, comp. Genesis 3:21,) and consequently Abel may be
regarded as the recorded head of the whole typical system, of which
Christ was the antitype and the fulfilment.
See Barnes "Hebrews 12:24".
A more excellent sacrifice. \~pleiona yusian\~ -as rendered by Tindal,
"more plenteous sacrifice;" or as Wickliffe renders it, more literally, "a
much more sacrifice;" that is, a more full or complete sacrifice; a better
sacrifice. The meaning is, that it had in it much more to render it
acceptable to God. In the estimate of its value, the views of him
who offered it would be more to be regarded than the nature of
the offering itself
By which. By which sacrifice so offered. The way in which he obtained
the testimony of Divine approbation was by the sacrifice offered in this
manner. It was not merely by faith; it was by the offering of a sacrifice
in connexion with, and under the influence of faith.
He obtained witness that he was righteous. That is, from God. His
offering, made in faith, was the means of his obtaining the Divine
testimonial that he was a righteous man. See Barnes "Hebrews 11:2". This
is implied in what is said in Genesis 4:4: "And the LORD had respect unto
Abel and to his offering;" that is, he regarded it as the offering of a
righteous man.
God testifying of his gifts. In what way this was done is not
mentioned either here or in Genesis. Commentators have usually supposed
that it was by fire descending from heaven to consume the sacrifice. But
there is no evidence of this, for there is no intimation of it in the
Bible. It is true that this frequently occurred when an offering was made
to God, (see Genesis 15:17; Leviticus 9:24; Judges 6:21; 1 Kings 18:38;) but the sacred
writers give us no hint that this happened in the case of the sacrifice
made by Abel; and since it is expressly mentioned in other cases and not
here, the presumption rather is that no such miracle occurred on the
occasion. So remarkable a fact--the first one in all history if it
were so--could hardly have failed to be noticed by the sacred writer. It
seems to me, therefore, that there was some method by which God
"testified" his approbation of the offering of Abel which is unknown to
us, but in regard to what it was conjecture is vain.
And by it he, being dead, yet speaketh. Marg. Is yet spoken of.
This difference of translation arises from a difference of reading in the
MSS. That from which the translation in the text is derived, is
\~lalei\~--he speaketh. That from which the rendering in the margin
is derived, is \~laleitai\~ is spoken of; that is, is praised or
commended. The latter is the common reading in the Greek text, and is
found in Walton, Wetstein, Matthaei, Tittman, and Mill; the former is
adopted by Griesbach, Koppe, Knapp, Grotius, Hammond, Storr, Rosenmuller,
Prof. Stuart, Bloomfield, and Hahn, and is found in the Syriac and
Coptic, and is that which is favoured by most of the Fathers. See
Wetstein. The authority of Mss. is in favour of the reading
\~laleitai\~--is spoken of. It is impossible, in this variety of
opinion, to determine which is the true reading, and this is one of the
cases where the original text must probably be for ever undecided.
Happily, no important doctrine or duty is depending on it. Either of the
modes of reading will give a good sense. The apostle is saying that it
is by faith that the "elders have obtained a good report,"
(Hebrews 11:2;) he had said, (Hebrews 11:4,) that it was by faith that
Abel obtained the testimony of God in his favour; and if the reading "is
spoken of" be adopted, the apostle means that, in consequence of that
offering thus made, Abel continued even to his time to receive an
honourable mention. This act was commended still; and the "good report,"
of which it had been the occasion, had been transmitted from age to age.
A sentiment thus of great beauty and value may be derived from the
passage --that true piety is the occasion of transmitting a good report,
or an honourable reputation, even down to the latest generation. It is
that which will embalm the memory in the grateful recollection of
mankind; that on which they will reflect with pleasure, and which they
will love to transmit to future ages. But, after all, it seems to me to
be probable that the true sentiment in this passage is that which is
expressed in the common version, "he yet speaketh." The reasons are
briefly these:
(1.) The authority of Mss., versions, editions, and critics, is so
nearly equal, that it is impossible from this source to determine
the true reading; and we must, therefore, form our judgment from
the connexion.
(2.) The apostle had twice in this verse expressed substantially the idea
that he was honourably testified of by his faith, and it is hardly
probable that he would again repeat it so soon.
(3.) There seems to be an allusion here to the language used
respecting Abel, (Genesis 4:10,) "The voice of thy brother's blood crieth
unto me from the ground;"--or utters a distinct voice--and the apostle
seems to design to represent Abel as still speaking.
(4.) In Hebrews 12:24, he represents both Abel and Christ as still
speaking--as if Abel continued to utter a voice of admonition.
The reference there is to the fact that he continued to proclaim
from age to age, even to the time of the apostle, the great truth
that salvation was only by blood. He had proclaimed it at first by
his faith when he offered the sacrifice of the lamb; he continued
to speak from generation to generation, and to show that it was
one of the earliest principles of religion that there could be
redemption from sin in no other way.
(5.) The expression "yet speaketh" accords better with the connexion.
The other interpretation is cold compared with this, and less fits the
case before us. Of the faith of Noah, Abraham, and Moses, it might be
said with equal propriety that it is still commended or celebrated as
well as that of Abel, but the apostle evidently means to say that there
was a voice in that of Abel which was peculiar; there was something in
his life and character which continued to speak from age
to age. His sacrifice, his faith, his death, his blood, all continued
to lift up the voice, and to proclaim the excellence and value of
confidence in God, and to admonish the world how to live.
(6.) This accords with usage in classic writers, where it is common to
say of the dead that they continue to speak. Comp. Virg. AEn. vi. 618
Et magna testafur voce per umbras:
Discite justitiam moniti, et non tetonere Divos.
If this be the true meaning, then the sense is, that there is an
influence from the piety of Abel which continues to admonish all
coming ages of the value of religion, and especially of the great
doctrine of the necessity of an atonement by blood. His faith and
his sacrifice proclaimed from age to age that this was one of the first
great truths made known to fallen man; and on this he continues
to address the world as if he were still living. Thus all who are
pious continue to exert an influence in favour of religion long after
the soul is removed to heaven, and the body consigned to the grave.
This is true in the following respects,
(1.) They speak by their example. The example of a pious father, mother,
neighbour, will be remembered. It will often have an effect after their
death in influencing those over whom it had little control while living.
(2.) They continue to speak by their precepts. The precepts of a
father may be remembered, with profit, when he is in his grave,
though they were heard with indifference when he lived; the counsels of a
minister may be recollected with benefit, though they were heard with
scorn.
(3.) They continued to speak from the fact that the good are remembered
with increasing respect and honour as long as they are remembered at all.
The character of Abel, Noah, and Abraham, is brighter now than it was
when they lived, and will continue to grow brighter to the end of time.
"The name of the wicked will rot," and the influence which they had
when living will grow feebler and feebler, till it wholly dies away.
Howard will be remembered, and will proclaim from age to age the
excellence of a life of benevolence; the character of Nero, Caligula,and
Richard III., has long since ceased to exert any influence whatever
in favour of evil, but rather shows the world, by contrast, the
excellence of virtue; and the same will yet be true of Paine, and
Voltaire, and Byron, and Gibbon, and Hume. The time will come when they
shall cease to exert any influence in favour of infidelity and sin; and
when the world shall be so satisfied of the error of their sentiments,
and the abuse of their talents, and the corruption of their hearts, that
their names, by contrast, will be made to promote the cause of piety and
virtue. If a man wishes to exert any permanent influence after he is
dead, he should be a good man. The strength of the faith of Abel,
here commended, will be seen by a reference to a few circumstances.
(1.) It was manifested shortly after the apostasy, and not long after the
fearful sentence had been pronounced in view of the sin of man. The
serpent had been cursed; the earth had been cursed; woe had been
denounced on the mother of mankind; and the father of the apostate race,
and all his posterity, doomed to toil and death. The thunder of this
curse had scarcely died away; man had been ejected from Paradise, and
sent out to enter on his career of woes, and the earth was trembling
under the malediction, and yet Abel maintained his confidence in God.
(2.) There was then little truth revealed, and only the slightest
intimation of mercy. The promise in Genesis 3:5, that the seed of the
woman should bruise the head of the serpent, is so enigmatical
and obscure, that it is not easy even now to see its exact meaning
---and it cannot be supposed that Abel could have had a full
understanding of what was denoted by it. Yet this appears to have
been all the truth respecting the salvation of man then revealed,
and on this Abel maintained his faith steadfast in God.
(3.) Abel had an elder brother, undoubtedly an infidel, a scoffer, a
mocker of religion. He was evidently endowed with a talent for sarcasm,
(Genesis 4:9;) and there is no reason to doubt, that, like other infidels
and scoffers, he would be disposed to use that talent when occasion
offered, to hold up religion to contempt. The power with which he used
this, and the talent with which he did this, may be seen illustrated,
probably with melancholy fidelity, in Lord Byron's, "Cain." No man ever
lived who could more forcibly express the feelings that passed through
the mind of Cain--for there is too much reason to think that his
extraordinary talents were employed, on this occasion, to give vent to
the feelings of his own heart, in the sentiments put into the mouth of
Cain. Yet, notwithstanding the infidelity of his elder brother, Abel
adhered to God and his cause. Whatever influence that infidel brother
might have sought to use over him--and there can be no reason
to doubt that such an influence would be attempted--yet he never
swelled, but maintained with steadfastness his belief in religion,
and his faith in God.
{a} "Abel offered" Genesis 4:4,5
{1} "yet speaketh" "is yet spoken of"
Verse 5. By faith Enoch was translated. The account of Enoch is found
in Genesis 5:21-24. It is very brief, and is this, that "Enoch
walked with God: and he was not; for God took him." There is no
particular mention of his faith; and the apostle attributes this to
him, as in the case of Abel, either because it was involved in the
very nature of piety, or because the fact was communicated to him
by direct revelation. In the account in Genesis, there is nothing
inconsistent with the belief that Enoch was characterized by
eminent faith, but it is rather implied in the expression, "he
walked with God." Comp. 2 Corinthians 5:7. It may also be implied
in what is said by the apostle Jude, (Jude 1:14,15,) that "he
prophesied, saying, Behold the Lord cometh with ten thousand of
his saints," etc. From this it would appear that he was a preacher;
that he predicted the coming of the Lord to judgment, and that he
lived in the firm belief of what was to occur in future times. Moses
does not say expressly that Enoch was translated. He says "he
was not, for God took him." The expression "he was not," means
he was no more among men; or he was removed from the earth.
This language would be applicable to any method by which he was
removed, whether by dying, or by being translated. A similar
expression respecting Romulus occurs in Livy, (i. 16,) Nec deinde
in tetris Romulus fuit. The translation of the Septuagint on this
part of the verse in Genesis is, \~ouc eurisketo\~--"was not found;"
that is, he disappeared. The authority for what the apostle says
here that he "was translated," is found in the other phrase in
Genesis, "God took him." The reasons which led to the statement that he
was translated without seeing death, or that show that this is a fair
conclusion from the words in Genesis, are such as these.
(1.) There is no mention made of his death, and in this respect the
account of Enoch stands by itself. It is, except in this case, the
uniform custom of Moses to mention the age and the death of the
individuals whose biography he records, and in many cases this is about
all that is said of them. But in regard to Enoch there is this remarkable
exception, that no record is made of his death-showing that there was
something unusual in the manner of his removal from the world.
(2.) The Hebrew word used by Moses, found in such a connexion, is one
which would rather suggest the idea that he had been taken, in some
extraordinary manner from the world. That word--\^HEBREW\^--means,
to take--with the idea of taking to one's self. Thus,
Genesis 8:20, "Noah took of all beasts, and offered a
burnt-offering." Thus it is often used in the sense of taking a wife
--that is, to one's self, (Genesis 4:19; 6:2; 12:19; 19:14;) and then it is
used in the sense of taking away, Genesis 14:12; 27:35; Job 1:21
Genesis 12:20; Psalms 31:13; Jeremiah 15:15. The word, therefore, would naturally
suggest the idea that he had been taken by God to himself, or had been
removed in an extraordinary manner from the earth. This is confirmed by
the fact that the word is not used anywhere in the Scriptures to
denote a removal by death, and that in the only other instance in
which it (\^HEBREW\^ is used in relation to a removal from this world, it
occurs in the statement respecting the translation of Elijah. "And
the sons of the prophets that were at Bethel, came forth to Elisha,
and said to him, Knowest thou that the Lord will take away (\^HEBREW\^)
thy master from thy head to-day?" 2 Kings 2:3,6; comp. Hebrews 11:11.
This transaction, where there could be no doubt about the manner
of the removal, shows in what sense the word is used in Genesis.
(3.) It was so understood by the translators of the Septuagint.
The apostle has used the same word in this place which is employed by the
Seventy in Genesis 5:24--\~metatiyhmi\~. This word means to transpose, to put
in another place; and then to transport, transfer, translate,
Acts 7:16; Hebrews 7:12. It properly expresses the removal to another
place, and is the very word which would be used on the supposition that
one was taken to heaven without dying.
(4.) This interpretation of the passage in Genesis
by Paul is in accordance with the uniform interpretation of the
Jews. In the Targum of Onkelos it is evidently supposed that
Enoch was translated without dying. In that Targum the passage
in Gen. v. 24 is rendered, "And Enoch walked in the fear of the
Lord, and was not, for the Lord did not put him to death"--
"\^HEBREW\^ So also in Ecclesiasticus or the Son of Sirach,
v: (xlix. 14,) "But upon the earth was no man created like Enoch;
for he was taken from the earth." These opinions of the Jews
and of the early translators, are of value only as showing that the
interpretation which Paul has put upon Genesis 5:24 is the natural
interpretation. It is such as occurs to separate writers, without
collusion, and this shows that this is the meaning most naturally
suggested by the passage.
That he should not see death. That is, that he should not experience
death, or be made personally acquainted with it. The word taste often
occurs in the same sense. Hebrews 2:9, "That he should taste death for
every man," Comp Matthew 16:28; Mark 9:1; Luke 9:27.
And was not found. Genesis 5:24: "And he was not." That is, he was
not in the land of the living. Paul retains the word used in the
Septuagint.
He had this testimony, that he pleased God. Implied in the
declaration in Genesis 5:22, that he "walked with God." This denotes
a state of friendship between God and him, and of course implies
that his conduct was pleasing to God. The apostle appeals here
to the sense of the account in Genesis, but does not retain the very
words. The meaning here is not that the testimony respecting
Enoch was actually given before his translation, but that the
testimony relates to his having pleased God before he was removed.
Stuart. In regard to this instructive fragment of history, and to
the reasons why Enoch was thus removed, we may make the following
remarks.
(1.) The age in which he lived was undoubtedly one of great wickedness.
Enoch is selected as the only one of that generation signalized by
eminent piety, and he appears to have spent his life in publicly
reproving a sinful generation, and in warning them of the approaching
judgment, Jude 1:14,16. The wickedness which ultimately led to the
universal deluge seems already to have commenced in the earth, and Enoch,
like Noah, his great-grandson, was raised up as a preacher of
righteousness to reprove a sinful generation.
(2.) It is not improbable that the great truths of religion in that age
were extensively denied; and probably, among other things, the future
state, the resurrection, the belief that man would exist in another
world, and that it was maintained that death was the end of being--was an
eternal sleep. If so, nothing could be better adapted to correct the
prevailing evils than the removal of an eminent man, without dying, from
the world. His departure would thus confirm the instructions of his
life; and his removal, like the death of saints often now, would
serve to make an impression which his living instructions would
not.
(3.) His removal is, in itself, a very important and instructive fact in
history. It has occurred in no other instance except that of Elijah; nor
has any other living man been translated to heaven except the Lord Jesus.
That fact was instructive in a great many respects.
(a.) It showed that there was a future state --another world.
(b.) It showed that the body might exist in that future state--though
doubtless so changed as to adapt it to the condition of things there.
(c.) It prepared the world to credit the account of the ascension of the
Redeemer. If Enoch and Elijah were removed thus without dying, there was
no intrinsic improbability that the Lord Jesus would be removed after
having died and risen again.
(d.) It furnishes a demonstration of the doctrine that the saints will
exist hereafter, which meets all the arguments of the sceptic and the
infidel. One single fact overturns all the mere speculations of
philosophy, and renders nugatory all the objections of the sceptic. The
infidel argues against the truth of the resurrection, and of the future
state, from the difficulties attending the doctrine. A single case of
one who has been raised up from the dead, or who has been removed to
heaven, annihilates all such arguments--for how can supposed difficulties
destroy a well authenticated fact?
(e,) It is an encouragement to piety. It shows that God regards his
friends; that their fidelity and holy living please him; and that
in the midst of eminent wickedness and a scoffing world, it is
possible so to live as to please God. The conduct of this holy man,
therefore, is an encouragement to us to do our duty, though we stand
alone; and to defend the truth, though all who live with us upon the
earth deny and deride it.
(4.) The removal of Enoch shows that the same thing would be possible
in the case of every saint. God could do it in other cases, as well as in
his, with equal ease. That his friends, therefore, are suffered to remain
on the earth--that they linger on in enfeebled health, or are crushed by
calamity, or are stricken: down by the pestilence as others are, is not
because God could not remove them, as Enoch was, without dying, but
because there is some important reason why they should remain, and
linger, and suffer, and die. Among those reasons may be such as the
following:
(a.) The regular operation of the laws of nature, as now constituted,
require it. Vegetables die; the inhabitants of the deep die; the fowls
that fly in the air, and the beasts that roam over hills and plains die;
and man, by his sins, is brought under the operation of this great
universal law. It would be possible, indeed, for God to save his
people from this law, but it would require the interposition of continued
miracles; and it is better to have the laws of nature regularly
operating, than to have them constantly set aside by Divine
interposition.
(b.) The power of religion is now better illustrated in the way in which
the saints are actually removed from the earth, than it would be if they
were all translated. Its power is now seen in its enabling us to overcome
the dread of death, and in its supporting us in the pains and sorrows of
the departing hour. It is a good thing to discipline the soul so that it
will not fear to die; it shows how superior religion is to all the forms
of philosophy, that it enables the believer to look calmly forward to his
own certain approaching death. It is an important matter to keep this
up from age to age, and to show to each generation that religion
can overcome the natural apprehension of the most fearful calamity
which befalls a creature--death; and can make man calm in the prospect of
lying beneath the clods of the valley, cold, dark, alone, to moulder back
to his native dust.
(c.) The death of the Christian does good. It preaches to the living. The
calm resignation, the peace, the triumph of the dying believer, is a
constant admonition to a thoughtless and wicked world. The deathbed of
the Christian proclaims the mercy of God from generation to generation,
and there is not a dying saint who may not, and who probably does not
do great good in the closing hours of his earthly being.
(d.) It may be added, that the present arrangement falls in with the
general laws of religion, that we are to be influenced by faith, not
by sight. If all Christians were removed like Enoch, it would be
an argument for the truth of religion addressed constantly to the
senses. But this is not the way in which the evidence of the truth
of religion is proposed to man. It is submitted to his understanding, his
conscience, his heart; and in this there is of design a broad distinction
between religion and other things. Men act, in other matters, under the
influence of the senses; it is designed that in religion they shall act
under the influence of higher and nobler considerations, and that they
shall be influenced not solely by a reference to what is passing before
their eyes, but to the things which are not seen.
{a} "Enoch was translated" Genesis 5:22,24
Verse 6. But without faith it is impossible to please him. Without
confidence in God--in his fidelity, his truth, his wisdom, his
promises. And this is as true in other things as ill religion. It is
impossible for a child to please his father unless he has confidence in
him. It is impossible for a wife to please her husband, or a husband a
wife, unless they have confidence in each other. If there is distrust and
jealousy on either part, there is discord and misery. We cannot be
pleased with a professed friend unless he has such confidence in us as to
believe our declarations and promises, The same thing is true of God. He
cannot be pleased with the man who has no confidence in him; who doubts
the truth of his declarations and promises; who does not believe that his
ways are right, or that he is qualified for universal empire. The
requirement of faith or confidence in God is not arbitrary; it is just
what we require of our children, and partners in life, and friends, as
the indispensable condition of our being pleased with them.
For he that cometh to God. In any way--as a worshipper. This is alike
required in public worship, in the family, and in secret devotion.
Must believe that he is. That God exists. This is the first thing
required in worship. Evidently we cannot come to him in an acceptable
manner if we doubt his existence. We do not see him, but we must believe
that he is; we cannot form in our mind a correct image of God, but this
should not prevent a conviction that there is such a Being. But the
declaration here implies more than that there should be a general
persuasion of the truth that there is a God. It is necessary that we have
this belief in lively exercise in the act of drawing near to him, and
that we should realize that we are actually in the presence of the
all-seeing JEHOVAH.
And that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him. This is
equally necessary as the belief that he exists. If we could not believe
that God would hear and answer our prayers, there could be no
encouragement to call upon him. It is not meant here that the desire of
the reward is to be the motive for seeking God--for the apostle makes no
affirmation on that point; but that it is impossible to make an
acceptable approach to him unless we have this belief.
{a} "him" Psalms 105:21,22
Verse 7. By faith Noah. It is less difficult to see that Noah must
have been influenced by faith than that Abel and Enoch were.
Everything which Noah did, in reference to the threatened deluge, was
done in virtue of simple faith or belief of what God said. It was
not because he could show from the course of events that things
were tending to such a catastrophe; or because such an event had
occurred before, rendering it probable that it would be likely to
occur again; or because this was the common belief of men, and
it was easy to fall into this himself. It was simply because God
had informed him of it, and he put unwavering reliance on the
truth of the Divine declaration.
Being warned of God. Genesis 6:13. The Greek word here used means
divinely admonished. Comp. Genesis 8:5.
Of things not seen as yet. Of the flood which was yet future. The
meaning is, that there were no visible signs of it; there was nothing
which could be a basis of calculation that it would occur. This
admonition was given an hundred and twenty years before the deluge, and
of course long before there could have been any natural indications that
it would occur.
Moved with fear. Marg. Being wary. The Greek word \~eulabhyeiv\~
---occurs only here and in Acts 23:10: "The chief captain fearing
lest Paul," etc. The noun occurs in Hebrews 5:7: "And was heard in
that he feared," See Barnes " :") and See Barnes "Hebrews 12:28":
"With reverence and godly fear." The verb properly means, to
act with caution, to be circumspect, and then to fear, to be afraid.
So far as the word is concerned, it might mean here that Noah was
influenced by the dread of what was coming, or it may mean that
he was influenced by proper caution and reverence for God. The
latter meaning agrees better with the scope of the remarks of Paul,
and is probably the true sense. His reverence and respect for God
induced him to act under the belief that what he had said was true, and
that the calamity which he had predicted would certainly come upon the
world.
Prepared an ark to the saving of his house. In order that his family
might be saved, Genesis 6:14-22. The salvation here referred to was
preservation from the flood.
By the which. By which faith.
He condemned the world. That is, the wicked world around him. The
meaning is, that by his confidence in God, and his preparation for the
flood, he showed the wisdom of his own course and the folly of theirs. We
have the same phrase now in common use, where one who sets a good
example is said to "condemn others." He shows the guilt and folly of
their lives by the contrast between his conduct and theirs. The
wickedness of the sinner is condemned not only by preaching, and by the
admonitions and threatenings of the law of God, but by the conduct of
every good man. The language of such a life is as plain a rebuke of the
sinner as the most fearful denunciations of Divine wrath.
And became heir of the righteousness which is by faith. The phrase,
"heir of righteousness," here means, properly, that he acquired, gained,
or became possessed of that righteousness. It does not refer so much to
the mode by which it was done, as if it were by inheritance, as to
the fact that he obtained it. The word heir is used in this
general sense in Romans 4:13,14; Titus 3:7; Hebrews 1:2; 6:17. Noah was not the
heir to that righteousness by inheriting it from his ancestors,
but in virtue of it he was regarded as among the heirs or sons of God,
and as being a possessor of that righteousness which is connected with
faith. The phrase "righteousness which is by faith" refers to the fact
that he was regarded and treated as a righteous man.
See Barnes "Romans 1:17". It is observable here, that it is not said that
Noah had specific faith in Christ, or that his being made heir of the
righteousness of faith depended on that, but it was in connexion with his
believing what God said respecting the deluge. It was faith or
confidence in God which was the ground of his justification, in
accordance with the general doctrine of the Scriptures that it is only by
faith that man can be saved, though the specific mode of faith was
not that which is required now under the gospel. In the early
ages of the world, when few truths were revealed, a cordial belief
of any of those truths showed that there was real confidence in
God, or that the principle of faith was in the heart; in the fuller
revelation which we enjoy, we are not only to believe those truths,
but specifically to believe in Him who has made the great atonement for
sin, and by whose merits all have been saved who have entered heaven. The
same faith or confidence in God which led Noah to believe what God said
about the deluge would have led him to believe what he has said about the
Redeemer; and the same confidence in God which led him to commit himself
to his safe keeping in an ark on the world of waters, would have led him
to commit his soul to the safe keeping of the Redeemer, the true
Ark of safety. As the principle of faith, therefore, existed in the
heart of Noah, it was proper that he should become, with others,
an "heir of the righteousness by faith."
In regard to the circumstances which show the strength of his faith, we
may make the following remarks.
(1.) It pertained to a very distant future event. It looked forward to
that which was to happen after a lapse of an hundred and twenty years.
This was known to Noah, (Genesis 6:3;) and, at this long period before it
occurred, he was to begin to build an ark to save himself and family--to
act as though this would be undoubtedly true. This is a much longer
period than man now is required to exercise faith before that is
realized which is the object of belief. Rare is it that three-score years
intervene between the time when a man first believes in God and when he
enters into heaven; much more frequently it is but a few months or days;
not an instance now occurs in which the period is lengthened out to an
hundred and twenty years.
(2.) There was no outward evidence that what Noah believed would
occur. There were no appearances in nature which indicated that there
would be such a flood of waters after more than a century had passed
away. There were no breakings up of the fountains of the deep; no marks
of the far-distant storm gathering on the sky, which could be the basis
of the calculation. The word of God was the only ground of evidence;
the only thing to which he could refer gainsayers and revilers. It is so
now. There are no visible signs of the coming of the Saviour to judge the
world. Yet the true believer feels and acts as if it were so--resting
on the sure word of God.
(3.) The course of things was much against the truth of what Noah
believed. No such event had ever occurred. There is no evidence that
there had ever been a storm of rain half sufficient to drown the world;
or that there had ever been the breaking up of the deep, or that there
had ever been a partial deluge. For sixteen hundred years the course of
nature had been uniform, and all the force of this uniformity would be
felt and urged when it should be alleged that this was to be disturbed,
and to give place to an entire new order of events. Comp. 2 Peter 3:4.
The same thing is now felt in regard to the objects of the Christian
faith. The course of events is uniform. The laws of nature are regular
and steady. The dead do not leave their graves. Seasons succeed each
other in regular succession; men are born, live, and die, as in former
times; fire does not wrap the earth in flames; the elements do not melt
with fervent heat; seed-time and harvest, cold and heat, summer and
winter follow each other, and "all things continue as they were from the
beginning of the creation." How many probabilities are there now,
therefore, as there were in the time of Noah, against that which is the
object of faith!
(4.) It is not improbable that when Noah proclaimed the approaching
destruction of the world by a deluge, the possibility of such an
event was strongly denied by the philosophers of that age. The fact that
such an event could have occurred has been denied by infidel philosophers
in our own times, and attempts have been gravely made to show that the
earth did not contain water enough to cover its surface to the height
mentioned in the Scriptures, and that no condensation of the vapour
in the atmosphere could produce such an effect. It is not improbable that
some such arguments may have been used in the time of Noah, and
it is morally certain that he could not meet those arguments by any
philosophy of his own. There is no reason to think that he was
endowed with such a knowledge of chemistry as to be able to show that
such a thing was possible, or that he had such an acquaintance with the
structure of the earth as to demonstrate that it contained within itself
the elements of its own destruction. All that he could oppose to such
speculations was the simple declaration of God; and the same thing is
also true now in regard to the cavils and philosophical arguments of
infidelity. Objections drawn from philosophy are often made against the
doctrine of the resurrection of the body; the destruction of the
earth by the agency of fire; and even the existence of the soul
after death. These difficulties may be obviated partly by science;
but the proof that these events will occur does not depend on
science. It is a matter of simple faith; and all that we can in fact
oppose to these objections is the declaration of God. The result
showed that Noah was not a fool or a fanatic in trusting to the
word of God against the philosophy of his age; and the result will
show the same of the Christian in his confiding in the truth of the
Divine declarations against the philosophy of his age.
(6.) It is beyond all question that Noah would be subjected to much
ridicule and scorn, he would be regarded as a dreamer; a fanatic;
an alarmist; a wild projector. The purpose of making preparation
for such an event as the flood to occur after the lapse of an
hundred and twenty years, and when there were no indications of
it, and all appearances were against it, would be regarded as in
the highest degree wild and visionary. The design of building a
vessel which would outride the storm, and which would live in
such an open sea, and which would contain all sorts of animals
with the food for them for an indefinite period, could not but have
been regarded as eminently ridiculous. When the ark was preparing,
nothing could have been a more happy subject for scoffing and jibes. In
such an age, therefore, and in such circumstances, we may suppose that
all the means possible would have been resorted to, to pour contempt on
such an undertaking. They who had wit, would find here an ample subject
for its exercise; if ballads were made then, no more fertile theme for a
profane song could be desired than this; and in the haunts of revelry,
intemperance, and pollution, nothing would furnish a finer topic to give
point to a jest, than the credulity and folly of the old man who
was building the ark. It would require strong faith to contend
thus with the wit, the sarcasm, the contempt, the raillery, and the
low jesting, as well as with the wisdom and philosophy of a whole
world. Yet it is a fair illustration of what occurs often now, and
of the strength of that faith in the Christian heart which meets
meekly and calmly the scoffs and jeers of a wicked generation.
(6.) All this would be heightened by delay. The time was distant. What
now completes four generations would have passed away before the event
predicted would occur, Youth grew up to manhood, and manhood passed on to
old age, and still there were no signs of the coming storm. That was no
feeble faith which could hold on in this manner for an hundred and twenty
years, believing unwaveringly that all which God had said would be
accomplished. But it is an illustration of faith in the Christian
church now. The church maintains the same confidence in God
from age to age--and, regardless of all the reproaches of scoffers,
and all the arguments of philosophy, still adheres to the truths
which God has revealed. So with individual Christians. They
look for the promise. They are expecting heaven. They doubt
not that the time will come when they will be received to glory;
when their bodies will be raised up glorified and immortal, and
when sin and sorrow will be no more. In the conflicts and trials of life,
the time of their deliverance may seem to be long delayed. The world may
reproach them, and Satan may tempt them to doubt whether all their hope
of heaven is not delusion. But their faith fails not; and though hope
seems delayed, and the heart is sick, yet they keep the eye on heaven. So
it is in regard to the final triumphs of the gospel. The Christian looks
forward to the time when the earth shall be full of the knowledge of God,
as the waters cover the sea. Yet that time may seem to be long delayed.
Wickedness triumphs. A large part of the earth is still filled with the
habitations of cruelty. The progress of the gospel is slow. The church
comes up reluctantly to the work. The enemies of the cause exult and
rejoice, and ask, with scoffing triumph, Where is the evidence that the
nations will be converted to God? They suggest difficulties; they refer
to the numbers, and to the opposition of the enemies of the true
religion; to the might of kingdoms, and to the power of fixed opinion,
and to the hold which idolatry has on mankind; and they sneeringly
inquire. At what period will the world be converted to Christ? Yet, in
the face of all difficulties, and arguments, and sneers, faith confides
in the promise of the Father to the Son, that the "heathen shall be
given to him for an inheritance, and the uttermost parts of the
earth for a possession," Psalms 2:8. The faith of the true Christian
is as strong in the fulfilment of this promise, as that of Noah was
in the assurance that the guilty world would be destroyed by a
flood of waters.
{b} "Noah" Genesis 6:14-22
{1} "moved with fear" "being wary"
{+} "house" "household"
Verse 8. By faith Abraham. There is no difficulty in determining that
Abraham was influenced by faith in God. The case is even stronger
than that of Noah, for it is expressly declared, Genesis 15:6, "And
he believed, in the LORD; and he counted it to him for righteousness."
Comp. See Barnes "Romans 4:1", and following. In the illustrations of the
power of faith in this chapter, the apostle appeals to two instances
m which it was exhibited by Abraham, "the father of the faithful."
Each of these required confidence in God of extraordinary strength,
and each of them demanded a special and honourable mention.
The first was that when he left his own country to go to a distant
land of strangers, (Hebrews 11:8-10;) the other when he showed his
readiness to sacrifice his own son in obedience to the will of God,
Hebrews 11:17-19.
When he was called. Genesis 12:1: "Now the Lord had said unto
Abraham, Get thee out of thy country, and from thy kindred, and from
thy father's house, unto a land that I will show thee."
Into a Place which he should after receive for an inheritance,
obeyed. To Palestine, or the land of Canaan, though that was not
indicated at the time.
And he went out not knowing whither he went. Genesis 12:4. Abraham at
that time took with him Sarai, and Lot the son of his brother, and "the
souls that they had gotten in Haran." Terah, the father of Abraham,
started on the journey with them, but died in Haran, Genesis 11:31,32.
The original call was made to Abraham, Genesis 12:1; Acts 7:2,3; but he
appears to have induced his father and his nephew to accompany him. At
this time he had no children, (Genesis 11:30,) though it seems probable
that Lot had, Genesis 12:6. Some, however, understand the expression in
Genesis 12:6, "and the souls they had gotten in Haran," as referring to
the servants or domestics that they had in various ways procured, and to
the fact that Abraham and Lot gradually drew around them a train of
dependents and followers who were disposed to unite with them, and
accompany them wherever they went. The Chaldee Paraphrast understands it
of the proselytes which Abraham had made there--"All the souls which
he had subdued under the law." When it is said that Abraham "went out not
knowing whither he went," it must be understood as meaning that he was
ignorant to what country he would in fact be led. If it be supposed that
he had some general intimatian of the nature of that country, and of the
direction in which it was situate, yet it must be remembered that the
knowledge of geography was then exceedingly imperfect; that this was a
distant country; that it lay beyond a pathless desert, and that probably
no traveller had ever come from that land to apprize him what it was. All
this serves to show what was the strength of the faith of Abraham.
{a} "when he was called" Genesis 12:1,4
Verse 9. By faith he sojourned in the land of promise, as in a
strange country. The land of Canaan that had been promised to him and
his posterity. He resided there as if he were a stranger and
sojourner. He had no possessions there which he did not procure by
honest purchase; he owned no land in fee-simple, except the small
piece which he bought for a burial-place. See Genesis 23:7-20. In all
respects he lived there as if he had no peculiar right in the soil; as
if he never expected to own it; as if he were in a country wholly
owned by others. He exercised no privileges which might not have been
exercised by any foreigner, and which was not regarded as a right of
common--that of feeding his cattle in any unoccupied part of the land;
and he would have had no power of ejecting any other persons,
excepting that which any one might have enjoyed by the pre-occupancy
of the pasture grounds. To all intents and purposes he was a stranger.
Yet he seems to have lived in the confident and quiet expectation that
that land would, at some period, come into the possession of his
posterity. It was a strong instance of faith that he should
cherish this belief for so long a time, when he was a stranger
there--when he gained no right in the soil, except in the small piece
that was purchased as a burial-place for his wife--and when he saw old
age coming on, and still the whole land in the possession of others.
Dwelling in tabernacles. In tents, the common mode of living in
countries where the principal occupation is that of keeping flocks and
herds. His dwelling thus in moveable tents looked little like its
being his permanent possession.
With Isaac and Jacob, the heirs with him of the same promise. That
is, the same thing occurred in regard to them which had to Abraham.
They also lived in tents. They acquired no fixed property, and no
title to the land, except to the small portion purchased as a
burial-place. Yet they were heirs of the same promise as Abraham, that
the land would be theirs. Though it was still owned by others, and
filled with its native inhabitants, yet they adhered to the belief
that it would come into the possession of their families. In their
movable habitations-- in their migrations from place to place--they
seem never to have doubted that the fixed habitation of their
posterity was to be there, and: that all that had been promised would
be certainly fulfilled.
{a} "dwelling" Genesis 13:3,18; 18:1,9
Verse 10. For he looked for a city which hath foundations. It has
been doubted to what the apostle here refers. Grotius and some others
suppose that he refers to Jerusalem, as a permanent dwelling for his
posterity in contradistinction from the unsettled mode of life which
Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob led. But there is no evidence that Abraham
looked forward to the building of such a city, for no promise was made
to him of this kind; and this interpretation falls evidently below the
whole drift of the passage. Comp. Hebrews 11:12:14-16,; 12:22; 13:14.
Phrases like that of "the city of God," "a city with foundations,"
"the new Jerusalem," and "the heavenly Jerusalem" in the time of the
apostle, appear to have acquired a kind of technical signification.
They referred to the area--of which Jerusalem, the seat of the worship
of God, seems to have been regarded as the emblem. Thus in
Hebrews 12:22, the apostle speaks of the "heavenly Jerusalem," and in
Hebrews 13:14, he says, "here have we no continuing city, but we seek
one to come." In Revelation 21:2, John says that he "saw the holy city, new
Jerusalem, coming down from God out of heaven," and proceeds in that
chapter and the following to give a most beautiful description of it.
Even so early as the time of Abraham, it would seem that the future
blessedness of the righteous was foretold under the image of a
splendid City reared on permanent foundations. It is remarkable that
Moses does not mention this as an object of the faith of Abraham, and
it is impossible to ascertain the degree of distinctness which this
had in is view. It is probable that the apostle, in speaking of his
faith in this particular, did not rely on any distinct record, or even
any tradition, but spoke of his piety in the language which, he would
use to characterize religion of any age, or in any individual, he was
accustomed, in common with others of his time, to contemplate the
future blessedness of the righteous under the image of a beautiful
city; a place where the worship of God would be celebrated for ever--a
city of which Jerusalem was the most striking representation to the
mind of a Jew. It was natural for him to speak of strong piety in this
manner wherever it existed, and especially in such a case as that of
Abraham, who left his own habitation to wander in a distant land. This
fact showed that he regarded himself as a stranger and sojourner; and
yet he had a strong expectation of a fixed habitation, and a permanent
inheritance. He must, therefore, have looked on to the permanent
abodes of the righteous; the heavenly city ;--and though he had an
undoubted confidence that the promised land would be given to his
posterity, yet, as he did not possess it himself, he must have looked
for his own permanent abode to the fixed residence of the just in
heaven. This passage seems to me to prove that Abraham had an
expectation of future happiness after death. There is not the
slightest evidence that he supposed there would be a magnificent and
glorious capital where the Messiah would personally reign, and where
the righteous dead, raised from their graves, would dwell in the
second advent of the Redeemer. All that the passage fairly implies is,
that while Abraham expected the possession of the promised land for
his posterity, yet his faith looked beyond this for a permanent home
in a future world.
Whose builder and maker is God. Which would not be reared by the
agency of man, but of which God was the immediate and direct
architect. This shows conclusively, I think, that the reference in
this allusion to the "city" is not to Jerusalem, as Grotius supposes;
but the language is just such as will appropriately describe heaven,
represented as a city reared without human hands or art, and founded
and fashioned by the skill and power of the Deity; Comp.
See Barnes "2 Corinthians 5:1". The language here applied to God as the
"architect" or framer of the universe is often used in the classic
writers. See Kuinoel and Wetstein. The apostle here commends the faith
of Abraham as eminently strong. The following hints will furnish
topics of reflection to those who are disposed to inquire more fully
into its strength.
(1.) The journey which he undertook was then a long and dangerous one.
The distance from Haran to Palestine, by a direct route, was not less
than four hundred miles, and this journey lay across a vast desert --a
part of Arabia Deserta. That journey has always been tedious and
perilous; but to see its real difficulty, we must put ourselves into
the position in which the world was four thousand years ago. There was
no knowledge of the way; no frequented path; no facility for
travelling; no turnpike or railway; and such a journey then must have
appeared incomparably more perilous than almost any which could now be
undertaken.
(2.) He was going among strangers. Who they were he knew not; but the
impression could not but have been made on his mind that they were
strangers to religion, and that a residence among them would be
anything but desirable.
(3.) He was leaving country, and home, and friends; the place of his
birth and the graves of his fathers, with the moral certainty that he
would see them no more.
(4.) He had no right to the country which he went to receive. He could
urge no claim on the ground of discovery, or inheritance, or conquest,
at any former period; but though he went in a peaceful manner, and
with no power to take it, and could urge no claim to it whatever, yet
he went with the utmost confidence that it would be his. He did not
even expect to buy it--for he had no means to do this, and it seems
never to have entered his mind to bargain for it in any way, except
for the small portion that he needed for a burying ground.
(5.) He had no means of obtaining possession. He had no wealth to
purchase it; no armies to conquer it; no title to it which could be
enforced before the tribunals of the land. The prospect of obtaining
it must have been distant, and probably he saw no means by which it
was to be done. In such a case, his only hope could be in God.
(6.) It is not impossible that the enterprise in that age might have
been treated by the friends of the patriarch as perfectly wild and
visionary. The prevailing religion evidently was idolatry, and the
claim which Abraham set up to a special call from the Most High, might
have been deemed entirely fanatical. To start off on a journey through
a pathless desert; to leave his country and home, and all that he held
dear, when he himself knew not whither he went; to go with no means of
conquest, but with the expectation that the distant and unknown land
would be given him, could not but have been regarded as a singular
instance of visionary hope. The whole transaction, therefore was in
the highest degree an act of simple confidence in God, where there was
no human basis or calculation, and where all the principles on which
men commonly act would have led him to pursue just the contrary
course. It is, therefore, not without reason, that the faith of
Abraham is so commended.
{b} "city" Hebrews 12:22; 13:14
{c} "builder and maker" Revelation 21:2,10
Verse 11. Through faith also Sarah herself received strength to
conceive seed. The word "herself" here--\~auth\~--implies
that there was something remarkable in the fact that she should
manifest this faith. Perhaps there may be reference here to the
incredulity with which she at first received the announcement that she
should have a child, Genesis 18:11,13. Even her strong incredulity was
overcome; and though everything seemed to render what was announced
impossible, and though she was so much disposed to laugh at the very
suggestion at first, yet her unbelief was overcome, and she ultimately
credited the Divine promise. The apostle does not state the authority
for his assertion that the strength of Sarah was derived from her
faith, nor when particularly it was exercised. The argument seems to
be, that here was a case where all human probabilities were against
what was predicted, and where, therefore, there must have been simple
trust in God. Nothing else but faith could have led her to believe
that in her old age she would have borne a son.
When she was past age. She was at this time more than ninety years
of age, Genesis 17:17. Comp. Genesis 18:11.
Because she judged him faithful who had promised. She had no other
ground of confidence or expectation. All human probability was against
the supposition that, at her time of life, she would be a mother.
{a} "Sarah" Genesis 21:1,2
{b} "faithful" Hebrews 10:23
Verse 12. Therefore sprang there even of one. From a single
individual. What is observed here by the apostle as worthy of remark
is, that the whole Jewish people sprang from one man, and that, as the
reward of his strong faith, he was made the father and founder of a
nation.
And him as good as dead. So far as the subject under discussion is
concerned. To human appearance there was no more probability that he
would have a son at that period of life than that the dead would have.
So many as the stars in the sky, etc. An innumerable multitude.
This was agreeable to the promise, Genesis 15:5; 22:17. The phrases
here used are often employed to denote a vast multitude, as nothing
appears more numerous than the stars of heaven, or than the sands that
lie on the shores of the ocean. The strength of faith in this case
was, that there was simple confidence in God in the fulfilment of a
promise where all human probabilities were against it. This is,
therefore, an illustration of the nature of faith. It does not depend
on human reasoning, on analogy, on philosophical probabilities, on the
foreseen operation of natural laws; but on the mere assurance of
God--no matter what may be the difficulties to human view, or the
improbabilities against it.
{c} "so many" Genesis 17:17; Romans 4:17
Verse 13. These all died in faith. That is those who had been just
mentioned--Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and Sarah. It was true of Abel and
Noah also, that they died in faith, but they are not included in
this declaration, for the "promises" were not particularly
entrusted to them; and if the word "these" be made to include them, it
must include Enoch also, who did not die at all. The phrase here used,
"these all died in faith," does not mean that they died in the
exercise or possession of religion, but more strictly that they died
not having possessed what was the object of their faith. They had been
looking for something future, which they did not obtain during their
lifetime, and died believing that it would yet be theirs.
Not having received the promises. That is, not having received the
fulfilment of the promises; or the promised blessings. The promises
themselves they had received. Comp. Luke 24:49; Acts 1:4,11,16; Galatians 3:14
\\Heb 11:33,39\\. In all these places the word promise is used by
metonymy for the thing promised.
But having seen them afar off. Having seen that they would be
fulfilled in future times. Comp. John 8:56. It is probable that
the apostle here means that they saw the entire fulfilment of all that
the promises embraced in the future that is, the bestowment of the
land of Canaan, the certainty of a numerous posterity, and of the
entrance into the heavenly Canaan --the world of fixed and permanent
rest. According to the reasoning of the apostle here, the "promises"
to which they trusted included all these things.
And were persuaded of them. Had no doubt of their reality.
And embraced them. This word implies more than our word embrace
frequently does; that is, to receive as true. It means, properly,
to draw to one's self; and then to embrace, as one does a
friend from whom he has been separated. It then means to greet,
salute, welcome, and here means a joyful greeting of those promises;
or a pressing them to the heart, as we do a friend. It was not a cold
and formal reception of them, but a warm and hearty welcome. Such is
the nature of true faith when it embraces the promises of salvation.
No act of pressing a friend to the bosom is ever more warm and
cordial.
And confessed that they were strangers. Thus Abraham said,
Genesis 23:4, "I am a stranger and a sojourner with you." That is, he
regarded himself as a foreigner; as having no home and no possessions
there. It was on this ground that he proposed to buy a burial place
of the sons of Heth.
And pilgrims. This is the word-- \~parepidhmov\~--which is used by
Abraham, as rendered by the Seventy in Genesis 23:4, and which is
there translated "sojourner" in the common English version. The word
pilgrim means, properly, a wanderer, a traveller, and
particularly one who leaves his own country to visit a holy place.
This sense does not quite suit the meaning here, or in
Genesis 23:4. The Hebrew word--\^HEBREW\^ means, properly, one who
dwells in a place, and particularly one who is a mere resident
without the rights of; a citizen. The Greek word means a by-resident;
one who lives by another or among a people not his own. This is the
idea here. It is not that they confessed themselves to be wanderers, or
that they had left their home to visit a holy place, but that they
resided as mere sojourners in a country that was not theirs. What
might be their ultimate destination, or their purpose, is not implied
in the meaning of the word. They were such as reside awhile among
another people, but have no permanent home there.
On the earth. The phrase here used--\~epi thv ghv\~--might mean merely
on the land of Canaan, but the apostle evidently uses it in a larger
sense as denoting the earth in general. There can be no doubt that
this accords with the views which the patriarchs had--regarding
themselves not only as strangers in the land of Canaan, but feeling
that the same thing was true in reference to their whole residence
upon the earth--that it was not their permanent home.
{1} "in faith" "according to"
{*} "promises" "the promised blessings"
{d} "confessed" 1 Chronicles 29:15; 1 Peter 2:11
Verse 14. For they that say such things, etc. That speak of
themselves as having come into' a land of strangers; and that
negotiate for a small piece of land, not to cultivate, but to bury
their dead. So we should think of any strange people coming among us
now--who lived in tents; who frequently changed their residence; who
became the purchasers of no land except to bury their dead, and who
never spake of becoming permanent residents. We should think that they
were in search of some place as their home, and that they had not yet
found it. Such people were the Hebrew patriarchs. They lived and acted
just as if they had not yet found a permanent habitation, but were
travelling in search of one.
Verse 15. And truly if they had been mindful of that country, etc,
If they had remembered it with sufficient interest and affection to
have made them desirous to return.
They might have had opportunity to have returned. The journey was
not so long or perilous that they could not have retraced their steps,
it would have been no more difficult or dangerous for them to do that
than it was to make the journey at first. This shows that their
remaining as strangers and sojourners in the land of Canaan was
voluntary. They preferred it, with all its inconveniences and
hardships, to return to their native land. The same thing is true of
all the people of God now. If they choose to return to the world, and
to engage again in all its vain pursuits, there is nothing to hinder
them. There are "opportunities" enough. There are abundant inducements
held out. There are numerous gay and worldly friends who would regard
it as a matter of joy and triumph to have them return to vanity and
folly again. They would welcome them to their society; rejoice to have
them participate in their pleasures; and be willing that they should
share in the honours and the wealth of the world. And they might do
it. There are multitudes of Christians who could grace, as they once
did, the ball-room; who could charm the social party by song and wit;
who could rise to the highest posts of office, or compete successfully
with others in the race for the acquisition of fame. They have seen
and tasted enough of the vain pursuits of the world, to satisfy them
with their vanity; they are convinced of the sinfulness of making
these things the great objects of living; their affections are now
fixed on higher and nobler objects, and they choose not to return to
those pursuits again, but to live as strangers and sojourners on the
earth--for there is nothing more voluntary than religion.
Verse 16. But now they desire a better country, that is, an
heavenly. That is, at the time referred to when they confessed that
they were strangers and sojourners, they showed that they sought a
better country than the one which they had left. They lived as if they
had no expectation of a permanent residence on earth, and were looking
to another world. The argument of the apostle here appears to be based
on what is apparent from the whole history, that they had a confident
belief that the land of Canaan would be given to "their posterity;
but as for themselves they had no expectation of permanently
dwelling there, but looked to a home in the heavenly country. Hence
they formed no plans for conquest; they laid claim to no title in the
soil; they made no purchases of farms for cultivation; they lived and
died without owning any land, except enough to bury their dead. All
this appears as if they looked for a final home in a "better
country, even an heavenly."
Wherefore God is not ashamed to be called their God. Since they
had such an elevated aim, he was willing to speak of himself as their
God and Friend. They acted as became his friends, and he was not
ashamed of the relation which he sustained to them. The language to
which the apostle evidently refers here is that which is found in
Exodus 3:6, "I am the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God
of Jacob." We are not to suppose that God is ever ashamed of
anything that he does. The meaning here is, that they had acted in
such a manner that it was fit that he should show towards them the
character of a Benefactor, Protector, and Friend.
For he hath prepared for them a city. Such as they had expected--a
heavenly residence, Hebrews 11:10. There is evidently here a
reference to heaven, represented as a city--the New
Jerusalem--prepared for his people by God himself. Comp.
See Barnes "Matthew 25:34". Thus they obtained what they had looked for
by faith. The wandering and unsettled patriarchs to whom the promise was
made, and who showed all their lives that they regarded themselves as
strangers and pilgrims, were admitted to the home of permanent rest;
and their posterity was ultimately admitted to the possession of the
promised land. Nothing could more certainly demonstrate that the
patriarchs believed in a future state than this passage. They did not
expect a permanent home on earth. They made no efforts to enter into
the possession of the promised land themselves. They quietly and
calmly waited for the time when God would give it to their posterity;
and, in the meantime, for themselves they looked forward to their
permanent home in the heavens. Even in this early period of the world,
therefore, there was the confident expectation of the future state.
Comp. See Barnes "Matthew 22:31". We may remark, that the life of the
patriarchs was, in all essential respects, such as we should lead.
They looked forward to heaven; they sought no permanent possessions
here; they regarded themselves as strangers and pilgrims on the earth.
So should we be. In our more fixed and settled habits of life; in our
quiet homes; in our residence in the land in which we were born, and
in the society of old and tried friends, we should yet regard
ourselves as "strangers and sojourners." We have here no fixed abode.
The houses in which we dwell will soon be occupied by others; the
paths in which we go will soon be trod by the feet of others; the
fields which we cultivate will soon be ploughed and sown and reaped by
others. Others will read the books which we read; sit down at the
tables where we sit; lie on the beds where we repose; occupy the
chambers where we shall die, and from whence we shall be removed to
our graves. If we have any permanent home, it is in heaven; and
that we have the faithful lives of the patriarchs teach us, and the
unerring word of God everywhere assures us.
{a} "their God" Exodus 3:6,15
{b} "city" Hebrews 11:10
Verse 17. By faith Abraham. The apostle had stated one strong
instance of the faith of Abraham, and he now refers to one still more
remarkable--the strongest illustration of faith, undoubtedly, which
has ever been evinced in our world.
When he was tried. The word here used is rendered tempted in
Matthew 4:1,3; 16:1; 19:3; 22:18,35, and in twenty-two other places in
the New Testament; prove, in John 6:6; hath gone about, in
Acts 24:6; examine, 2 Corinthians 13:6; and tried, in
Revelation 2:2,10; 3:10. It does not mean here, as it often does, to place
inducements before one to lead him to do wrong, but to subject his
faith to a trial in order to test its genuineness and strength. The
meaning here is, that Abraham was placed in circumstances which showed
what was the real strength of his confidence in God.
Offered up Isaac. That is, he showed that he was ready and
willing to make the sacrifice, and would have done it if he had not
been restrained by the voice of the angel, Genesis 22:11,12. So far
as the intention of Abraham was concerned, the deed was done, for he
had made every preparation for the offering, and was actually about to
take the life of his son.
And he that had received the promises offered up his only-begotten
son. The promises particularly of a numerous posterity. The
fulfilment of those promises depended on him whom he was now about to
offer as a sacrifice. If Abraham had been surrounded with children, or
if no special promise of a numerous posterity had been made to him,
this act would not have been so remarkable. It would, in any case,
have been a strong act of faith; it was peculiarly strong in his case,
from the circumstances that he had an only son, and that the
fulfilment of the promise depended on his life.
{c} "tried" Genesis 22:1; James 2:21
Verse 18. Of whom it was said, That in Isaac shall thy seed be
called. Genesis 21:12. A numerous posterity had been promised to
him. It was there said expressly that this promise was not to be
fulfilled through the son of Abraham by the bond-woman Hagar, but
through Isaac. Of course, it was implied that Isaac was to reach
manhood; and yet, notwithstanding this, and notwithstanding Abraham
fully believed it, he prepared deliberately, in obedience to the
Divine command, to put him to death. The phrase, "thy seed be called,"
means, that his posterity was to be named after Isaac, or was to
descend only from him. The word "called," in the Scriptures, is
often equivalent to the verb to be. See Isaiah 56:7. To name
or call a thing, was the same as to say that it was, or that it
existed. It does not mean here that his spiritual children were to be
called or selected from among the posterity of Isaac, but that the
posterity promised to Abraham would descend neither from Ishmael nor
the sons of Keturah, but in the line of Isaac. This is a strong
circumstance insisted on by the apostle, to show the strength of
Abraham's faith. It was shown not only by his willingness to offer up
the child of his old age--his only son by his beloved wife, but by his
readiness, at the command of God, to sacrifice even him on whom the
fulfilment of the promises depended.
{1} "Of whom" "To"
{d} "That in Isaac" Genesis 21:12
Verse 19. Accounting that God was able to raise him up, even from
the dead. And that he would do it; for so Abraham evidently
believed, and this idea is plainly implied in the whole narrative.
There was no other way in which the promise could be fulfilled; and
Abraham reasoned justly in the case. He had received the promise of a
numerous posterity, he had been told expressly that it was to be
through this favourite child, he was now commanded to put him to death
as a sacrifice, and he prepared to do it. To fulfil these promises,
therefore, there was no other way possible but for him to be raised up
from the dead, and Abraham fully believed that it would be done. The
child had been given to him at first in a supernatural manner, and he
was prepared, therefore, to believe that he would be restored to him
again by miracle. He did not doubt that he who had given him to him at
first, in a manner so contrary to all human probability, could
restore him again in a method as extraordinary, He therefore,
anticipated that he would raise him up immediately from the dead. That
this was the expectation of Abraham is apparent from the narrative in
Genesis 22:6: "And Abraham said unto his young men, Abide ye here with
the ass; and I and the lad will go yonder, and worship, and come again
to you;" in the plural-\^HEBREW\^-"and we will return;" that is, I and
Isaac will return, for no other persons went with them, Genesis 22:6.
As Abraham went with the full expectation of sacrificing Isaac, and as
he expected Isaac to return with him, it follows that he believed that
God would raise him up immediately from the dead.
From whence also he received him in a figure. There has been great
difference of opinion as to the sense of this passage, but it seems
to me to be plain. The obvious interpretation is, that he then
received him by his being raised up from the altar as if from the
dead. He was to Abraham dead. He had given him up. He had prepared to
offer him as a sacrifice. He lay there before him as one who was
dead. From that altar he was raised up by direct Divine interposition,
as if he was raised from the grave, and this was to Abraham a
figure or a representation of the resurrection. Other
interpretations may be seen in Stuart, in loc. The following
circumstances will illustrate the strength of Abraham's faith in this
remarkable transaction.
(1.) The strong persuasion on his mind that God had commanded this.
In a case of this nature--where such a sacrifice was required--how
natural would it have been for a more feeble faith to have doubted
whether the command came from God! It might have been suggested to
such a mind that this must be a delusion, or a temptation of Satan;
that God could not require such a thing; and that whatever might be
the appearance of a Divine command in the cases there must be some
deception about it. Yet Abraham does not appear to have reasoned about
it at all, or to have allowed the strong feelings of a father to come
in to modify his conviction that God had commanded him to give up his
son. What an example is this to us! And how ready should we be to
yield up a son--an only son--when God comes himself and removes him
from us.
(2.) The strength of his faith was seen in the fact that, in obedience
to the simple command of God, all the strong feelings of a father were
overcome. On the one hand, there were his warm affections for an only
son; and on the other, there was the simple command of God. They came
in collisions but Abraham did not hesitate a moment. The strong
paternal feeling was sacrificed at once. What an example this, too,
for us! When the command of God and our own attachments come into
collision, we should not hesitate a moment. God is to be obeyed. His
command and arrangements are to be yielded to, though most tender ties
are rent asunder, and though the heart bleeds.
(3.) The strength of his faith was seen in the fact that, in obedience
to the command of God, he resolved to do what in the eyes of the world
would be regarded as a most awful crime. There is no crime of a higher
grade than the murder of a son by the hand of a father. So it is now
estimated by the world, and so it would have been in the time of
Abraham. All the laws of God and of society appeared to be against the
act which Abraham was about to commit, and he went forth not ignorant
of the estimate which the world would put on this deed if it were
known. How natural, in such circumstances, would it have been to
argue, that God could not possibly give such a command; that it
was against all the laws of heaven and earth; that there was required
in this what God and man alike must and would pronounce to be wrong
and abominable! Yet Abraham did not hesitate. The command of God in
the case was, to his mind, a sufficient proof that this was right; and
it should teach us that whatever our Maker commands us should be
done--no matter what may be the estimate affixed to it by human laws,
and no matter how it may be regarded by the world.
(4.) The strength of his faith was seen in the fact, that there was a
positive promise of God to himself which would seem to be
frustrated by what he was about to do. God had expressly promised to
him a numerous posterity, and had said that it was to be through this
son. How could this be if he was put to death as a sacrifice? And how
could God command such a thing when his promise was thus positive?
Yet Abraham did not hesitate. It was not for him to reconcile
these things; it was his to obey. He did not doubt that
somehow all that God had said would prove to be true; and as he
saw but one way in which it could be done--by his being immediately
restored to life--he concluded that that was to be the way. So when
God utters his will to us, it is ours simply to obey. It is not to
inquire in what way his commands or revealed truth can be reconciled
with other things. He will himself take care of that. It is ours at
once to yield to what he commands, and to believe that somehow all
that he has required and said will be consistent with everything else
which he has uttered.
(5.) The strength of the faith of Abraham was seen in his belief that
God would raise his son from the dead. Of that he had no doubt. But
what evidence had he of that? It had not been promised. No case of the
kind had ever occurred; and the subject was attended with all the
difficulties which attend it now. But Abraham believed it; for, first,
there was no other way in which the promise of God could be fulfilled;
and, second, such a thing would be no more remarkable than what had
already occurred. It was as easy for God to raise him from the dead as
it was to give him at first, contrary to all the probabilities of the
case---and he did not, therefore, doubt that it would be so. Is it
less easy for us to believe the doctrine of the resurrection than it
was for Abraham? Is the subject attended with more difficulties now
than it was then? The faith of Abraham, in this remarkable instance,
shows us that the doctrine of the resurrection of the dead,
notwithstanding the limited revelations then enjoyed, and all the
obvious difficulties of the case, was early believed in the world; and
as those difficulties are no greater now, and as new light has been
shed upon it by subsequent revelations, and especially as, in more
than one instance, the dead have been actually raised, those
difficulties should not be allowed to make us doubt it, now.
Verse 20. By faith Isaac blessed Jacob and Esau concerning things
to come. See Genesis 27:26-40. The meaning is, that he
pronounced a blessing on them in respect to their future condition.
This was by faith in God, who had communicated it to him, and in full
confidence that he would accomplish all that was here predicted. The
act of faith here was simply that which believes that all that God
says is true. There were no human probabilities at the time when these
prophetic announcements were made, which could have been the basis of
his calculation; but all that he said must have rested merely on the
belief that God had revealed it to him. A blessing was pronounced on
each, of a very different nature, but Isaac had no doubt that both
would be fulfilled.
{a} "Isaac blessed" Genesis 27:27-40
Verse 21. By faith Jacob, when he was a dying. Genesis 47:31
Genesis 48:1-20. That is, when he was about to die. He saw his death
near when he pronounced this blessing on Ephraim and Manasseh, the sons
of Joseph.
And worshipped, leaning upon the top of his staff. This is an
exact quotation from the Septuagint in Genesis 47:31. The English
version of that place is, "and Israel bowed himself upon the bed's
head," which is a proper translation, in the main, of the word
\^HEBREW\^--mittch. That word, however, with different
points--\^HEBREW\^--mattch, means, a branch, a bough, a rod, a
staff, and the translators of the Septuagint have so rendered it. The
Masoretic points are of no authority, and either translation,
therefore, would be proper. The word rendered "head" in Genesis 47:31--
"bed's head"--\^HEBREW\^--rosh, means, properly,
head, but may there mean the top of anything, and there is no
impropriety in applying it to the head or top of a staff. The word
rendered in Genesis 47:31, bowed--\^HEBREW\^--implies, properly,
the idea of worshipping. It is bowing, or prostration for the purpose
of worship or homage. Though the Septuagint and the apostle here have,
therefore, given a somewhat different version from that commonly given
of the Hebrew, and sustained by the Masoretic pointing, yet it cannot
be demonstrated that the version is unauthorized, or that it is not a
fair translation of the Hebrew. It has also the probabilities of the
case in its favour. Jacob was tenderly affected in view of the
goodness of God, and of the assurance that he would be conveyed from
Egypt when he died, and buried in the land of his fathers. Deeply
impressed with this, nothing was more natural than that the old man
should lean reverently forward, and incline his head upon the top of
his staff, and adore the covenant faithfulness of his God. Such an
image is much more natural and probable than that he should "bow upon
his bed's head"--a phrase which at best is not very intelligible. If
this be the true account, then the apostle does not refer here to what
was done when he "blessed the sons of Joseph," but to an act
expressive of strong faith in God which had occurred just before. The
meaning then is, "By faith when about to die he blessed the sons of
Joseph; and by faith also, he reverently bowed before God in the
belief that when he died his remains would be conveyed to the promised
land, and expressed his gratitude in an act of worship, leaning
reverently on the top of his staff." The order in which these things
are mentioned is of no consequence, and thus the whole difficulty in
the case vanishes. Both the acts here referred to were expressive
of strong confidence in God.
{b} "both" Genesis 48:5-20
{c} "leaning" Genesis 47:31
Verse 22. By faith Joseph, when he died. When about to die. See
Genesis 50:24,25.
Made mention of the departing of the children of Israel. Marg.
"remembered." The meaning is, that he called this to their mind; he
spake of it.
And Joseph said unto his brethren, I die; and God will surely visit
you, and bring you out of this land unto the land which he sware to
Abraham, to Isaac, and to Jacob." This prediction of Joseph
could have rested only on faith in the promise of God. There were
no events then occurring which would be likely to lead to this, and
nothing which could be a basis of calculation that it would be so,
except what God had spoken. The faith of Joseph, then, was simple
confidence in God; and its strength was seen in his firm conviction
that what had been promised would be fulfilled, even when there were no
appearances that, to human view, justified it.
And gave commandment concerning his bones. Genesis 50:25,26. And
Joseph took an oath of the children of Israel; saying, God will surely
visit you, and ye shall carry up my bones from hence." He had such a
firm belief that they would possess the land of promise, that he
exacted an oath of them that they would remove his remains with them,
that he might be buried in the land of his fathers. He could not have
exacted this oath, nor could they have taken it, unless both he and
they had a sure confidence that what God had spoken would be
performed.
{a} "Joseph" Genesis 50:24,25
{d} "made mention" "remembered"
Verse 23. By faith Moses, when he was born. That is, by the faith
of his parents. The faith of Moses himself is commended in the
following verses. The statement of the apostle here is that his
parents were led to preserve his life by their confidence in God.
They believed that he was destined to some great purpose, and that he
would be spared, notwithstanding all the probabilities against it, and
all the difficulties in the case.
Was hid three months of his parents. By his parents. In
Exodus 2:2, it is said that it was done by his mother. The truth
doubtless was, that the mother was the agent in doing it--since the
concealment, probably, could be better effected by one than where two
were employed--but that the father also concurred in it is morally
certain. The concealment was at first, probably in their own house. The
command seems to have been (Exodus 1:22,) that the child should be cast
into the river as soon as born. This child was concealed in the hope
that some way might be found out by which his life might be spared.
Because they saw he was a proper child. A fair, or beautiful
child-- \~asteion\~. The word properly means, pertaining to a city,
(from \~astu\~, a city;) then urbane, polished, elegant; then
fair, beautiful. In Acts 7:20, it is said that he was "fair
to God," (Marg. ;) that is, exceedingly fair, or very handsome. His
extraordinary beauty seems to have been the reason which particularly
influenced his parents to attempt to preserve him. It is not
impossible that they supposed that his uncommon beauty indicated that
he was destined to some important service in life, and that they were
on that account the more anxious to save him.
And they were not afraid of the king's commandment. Requiring that
all male children should be given up to be thrown into the Nile. That
is, they were not so alarmed, or did not so dread the king, as to be
induced to comply with the command. The strength of the faith of the
parents of Moses appears,
(1.) because the command of Pharaoh to destroy all the male children was
positive, but they had so much confidence in God as to disregard it.
(2.) Because there was a strong improbability that their child could
be saved. They themselves found it impossible to conceal him longer
than three months; and when it was discovered, there was every
probability that the law would be enforced, and that the child would
be put to death. Perhaps there was reason also to apprehend that the
parents would be punished for disregarding the authority of the king.
(3.) Because they probably believed that their child was destined to
some important work. They thus committed him to God instead of
complying with the command of an earthly monarch; and, against strong
probabilities in the case, they believed that it was possible that in
some way he might be preserved alive. The remarkable result showed
that their faith was not unfounded.
{b} "hid three months" Exodus 2:2
{*) "of" "by"
{c} "king's commandment" Exodus 1:16,22.
Verse 24. By faith Moses. He had confidence in God when he called
him to be the leader of his people. He believed that he was able to
deliver them; and he so trusted in him that he was willing, at his
command, to forego the splendid prospects which opened before him in
Egypt.
When he was come to years. Gr. "being great;" that is, when he
was grown up to manhood. He was at that time forty years of age.
See Barnes "Acts 7:23". He took this step, therefore, in the full
maturity of his judgment, and when there was no danger of being
influenced by the ardent passions of youth.
Refused to be called the son of Pharaoh's daughter. When saved
from the ark in which he was placed on the Nile, he was brought up
for the daughter of Pharaoh, Exodus 2:9. He seems to have been
adopted by her, and trained up as her own son. What prospects this
opened before him is not certainly known. There is no probability
that he would be the heir to the crown of Egypt, as is often affirmed,
for there is no proof that the crown descended in the line of
daughters; nor, if it did, is there any probability that it would
descend on an adopted son of a daughter. But his situation could not
but be regarded as highly honourable, and as attended with great
advantages. It gave him the opportunity of receiving the best
education which the times and country afforded--an opportunity of
which he seems to have availed himself to the utmost.
See Barnes "Acts 7:22". It would doubtless be connected with important
offices in the state. It furnished the opportunity of a life of ease and
pleasure--such as they commonly delight in who reside at courts. And
it doubtless opened before him the prospect of wealth, for there is no
improbability in supposing that he would be the heir of the daughter
of a rich monarch. Yet all this, it is said, he "refused." There
is indeed no express mention made of his formally and openly
refusing it, but his leaving the court, and identifying himself with
his oppressed countrymen was, in fact, a refusal of these high
honours, and of these brilliant prospects. It is not impossible that,
when he became acquainted with his real history, there was some open
and decided refusal, on his part, to be regarded as the son of the
daughter of this heathen monarch.
{d} "Moses" Exodus 2:10,11
Verse 25. Choosing rather to suffer affliction with the people of
God. With those whom God had chosen to be his people--the
Israelites, They were then oppressed and downtrodden; but they were
the descendants of Abraham, and were those whom God had designed to be
his peculiar people. Moses saw that if he cast in his lot with them,
he must expect trials. They were poor, and crushed, and despised--a
nation of slaves. If he identified himself with them, his condition
would be like theirs--one of great trial; if he sought to elevate and
deliver them, such an undertaking could not but be one of great peril
and hardship. Trial and danger, want and care, would follow from any
course which he could adopt, and he knew that an effort to rescue them
from bondage must be attended with the sacrifice of all the comforts
and honour which he enjoyed at court. Yet he "chose" this. He on
the whole preferred it. He left the court, not because he was driven
away; not because there was nothing there to gratify ambition; or to
be a stimulus to avarice; and not on account of harsh treatment--for
there is no intimation that he was not treated with all the respect
and honour due to his station, his talents, and his learning, but
because he deliberately preferred to share the trials and sorrows
of the friends of God. So every one who becomes a friend of God, and
casts in his lot with his people, though he may anticipate that it
will be attended with persecution, with poverty, and with scorn,
prefers this to all the pleasures of a life of gaiety and sin, and to
the most brilliant prospects of wealth and fame which this world can
offer.
Than to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season. We are not to
suppose that Moses, even at the court of Pharaoh, was leading a life
of vicious indulgence. The idea is, that sins were practised there
such as those in which pleasure is sought; and that if he had remained
there it must have been because he loved the pleasures of a sinful
court and a sinful life, rather than the favour of God. We may learn
from this,
(1.) that there is a degree of pleasure in sin. It does not deserve
to be called happiness and the apostle does not call it so. It is
"pleasure," excitement, hilarity, merriment, amusement.
Happiness is more solid and enduring than "pleasure;" and solid
happiness is not found in the ways of sin. But it cannot be denied
that there is a degree of pleasure which maybe found in amusement;
in the excitement of the ballroom; in feasting and revelry; in sensual
enjoyments. All which wealth and splendour, music and dancing, sensual
gratifications, and the more refined pursuits in the circles of
fashion can furnish, may be found in a life of irreligion; and if
disappointment, and envy, and sickness, and mortified pride, and
bereavements do not occur, the children of vanity and sin can find no
inconsiderable enjoyment in these things. They say they do; and there
is no reason to doubt the truth of their own testimony in the case.
They call it a "life of pleasure;" and it is not proper to
withhold from it the appellation which they choose to give it. It is
not the most pure or elevated kind of enjoyment, but it would be
unjust to deny that there is any enjoyment in such a course.
(2.) It is only "for a season." It will all soon pass away. Had Moses
lived at the court of Pharaoh all his days, it would have been only
for a little "season." These pleasures soon vanish, for
(a.) life itself is short at best; and if a career of "pleasure" is
pursued through the whole of the ordinary period allotted to man, it
is very brief
(b.) Those who live for pleasure often abridge their own lives.
Indulgence brings disease in its train, and the votaries of sensuality
usually die young. The art has never been yet discovered of combining
intemperance and sensuality with length of days. If a man wishes a
reasonable prospect of long life, he must be temperate and virtuous.
Indulgence in vice wears out the nervous and muscular system, and
destroys the powers of life--just as a machine without balance-wheel
or governor would soon tear itself to pieces.
(c.) Calamity, disappointment, envy, and rivalship, mar such a life of
pleasure--and he who enters on it, from causes which he cannot
control, finds it very short. And,
(d.) compared with eternity, oh how brief is the longest life spent in
the ways of sin. Soon it must be over--and then the unpardoned sinner
enters on an immortal career where pleasure is for ever unknown!
(3.) In view of all the "pleasures" which sin can furnish, and in view
of the most brilliant prospects which this world can hold out,
religion enables man to pursue a different path. They who become the
friends of God are willing to give up all those fair and glittering
anticipations, and to submit to whatever trials may be incident to a
life of self-denying piety. Religion, with all its privations and
sacrifices, is preferred, nor there ever is occasion to regret the
choice. Moses deliberately made that choice: nor in all the trials
which succeeded it--in all the cares incident to his great office in
conducting the children of Israel to the promised land--in all their
ingratitude and rebellion--is there the least evidence that he ever
once wished himself back again that he might enjoy "the pleasures of
sin" in Egypt.
{e} "choosing" Psalms 84:10
Verse 26. Esteeming the reproach of Christ. Marg. "For;" that is,
on account of Christ. This means either that he was willing to bear
the reproaches incident to his belief that the Messiah would come, and
that he gave up his fair prospects in Egypt with that expectation; or
that he endured such reproaches as Christ suffered; or the apostle
uses the expression as a sort of technical phrase, well understood in
his time, to denote sufferings endured in the cause of religion.
Christians at that time would naturally describe all sufferings on
account of religion as endured in the cause of Christ; and Paul,
therefore, may have used this phrase to denote sufferings in the cause
of religion--meaning that Moses suffered what, when the apostle wrote,
would be called "the reproaches of Christ." It is not easy, or perhaps
possible, to determine which of these interpretations is the correct
one. The most respectable names may be adduced in favour of each, and
every reader must be left to adopt his own view of that which is
correct. The original will admit of either of them. The general idea
is, that he would be reproached for the course which he pursued. He
could not expect to leave the splendours of a court, and undertake
what he did, without subjecting himself to trials. He would be
blamed by the Egyptians for his interference in freeing their
"slaves," and in bringing so many calamities upon their country, and
he would be exposed to ridicule for his folly in leaving his brilliant
prospects at court to become identified with an oppressed and despised
people. It is rare that men are zealous in doing good without
exposing themselves both to blame and to ridicule.
Greater riches. Worth more; of greater value. Reproach itself
is not desirable; but reproach, when a man receives it in an effort to
do good to others, is worth more to him than gold, 1 Peter 4:13,14.
The scars which an old soldier has received in the defence of his
country are more valued by him than his pension; and the reproach
which a good man receives in endeavouring to save others is a subject
of greater joy to him than would be all the wealth which could be
gained in a life of sin.
Than the treasures in Egypt. It is implied here, that Moses had a
prospect of inheriting large treasures in Egypt, and that he
voluntarily gave them up to be the means of delivering his nation from
bondage. Egypt abounded in wealth; and the adopted son of the
daughter of the king would naturally be heir to a great estate.
For he had respect unto the recompence of the reward. The
"recompence of the reward" here referred to must mean the blessedness
of heaven--for he had no earthly reward to look to. He had no prospect
of pleasure, or wealth, or honour, in his undertaking. If he had
sought these, so far as human sagacity could foresee, he would have
remained at the court of Pharaoh. The declaration here proves that it
is right to have respect to the rewards of heaven in serving God. It
does not prove that this was the only or the main motive which
induced Moses to abandon his prospects at court; nor does it prove
that this should be our main or only motive in leading a life of
piety. If it were, our religion would be mere selfishness. But it is
right that we should desire the rewards and joys of heaven, and that
we should allow the prospect of those rewards and joys to influence us
as a motive to do our duty to God, and to sustain us in our trials.
Comp. Philippians 3:8-11,13,14.
{1} "of" "For"
{a} "Christ" Hebrews 13:13
{b} "recompense" Hebrews 10:35
Verse 27. By faith he forsook Egypt. Some have understood this of
the first time in which Moses forsook Egypt, when he fled into Midian,
as recorded in Exodus 2; the majority of expositors have supposed
that it refers to the time when he left Egypt to conduct the
Israelites to the promised land. That the latter is the time referred
to is evident from the fact that it is said that he did "not fear the
wrath of the king." When Moses first fled to the land of Midian it is
expressly said that he went because he did fear the anger of Pharaoh
for his having killed an Egyptian, Exodus 2:14,15. He was at that
time in fear of his life; but when he left Egypt at the head of the
Hebrew people, he had no such apprehensions. God conducted him out
with "an high hand;" and throughout all the events connected with that
remarkable deliverance, he manifested no dread of Pharaoh, and had no
apprehension from what he could do. He went forth, indeed, at the head
of his people when all the power of the king was excited to destroy
them, but he went confiding in God; and this is the faith referred to
here.
For he endured. He persevered, amidst all the trials and difficulties
connected with his leading forth the people from bondage.
As seeing him who is invisible. As if he saw God. He had no more
doubt that God had called him to this work, and that he would sustain
him, than if he saw him with his bodily eyes. This is a most accurate
account of the nature of faith. Comp. See Barnes "Hebrews 11:1".
{c} "wrath of king" Exodus 10:28,29
{d} "him" 1 Timothy 1:17
Verse 28. Through faith he kept the passover. Gr., "he made
\~pepoihke\~ --the passover," which means more, it seems to me, than that
he merely kept or celebrated it. It implies that he instituted this
rite, and made the arrangements for its observance. There is reference
to the special agency, and the special faith which he had in its
institution. The faith in the case was confidence that this would be
the means of preserving the firstborn of the Israelites, when the
angel should destroy the firstborn of the Egyptians, and also that it
would be celebrated as a perpetual memorial of this great deliverance.
On the Passover, See Barnes "Matthew 26:2".
And the sprinkling of blood. The blood of the paschal lamb on the
lintels and door-posts of the houses, Exodus 12:22.
Lest he that destroyed the firstborn should touch them. "The
firstborn of the Egyptians, Exodus 12:23. The apostle has thus
enumerated some of the things which illustrated the faith of Moses.
The strength of his faith may be seen by a reference to some of
the circumstances which characterized it.
(1.) It was such confidence in God as to lead him to forsake the most
flattering prospects of worldly enjoyment. I see no evidence, indeed,
that he was the heir to the throne; but he was evidently heir to great
wealth; he was encompassed with all the means of worldly pleasure; he
had every opportunity for a life of literary and scientific pursuits;
he was eligible to high and important trusts; he had a rank and
station which would be regarded as one of the most honoured and
enviable on earth. None of those who are mentioned before in this
chapter were required to make just such sacrifices as this. Neither
Abel, nor Noah, nor Enoch, was called to forsake such brilliant
worldly prospects; and though Abraham was called to a higher act of
faith when commanded to give up his beloved son, yet there were some
circumstances of trial in the case of Moses, illustrating the nature
of faith, which did not exist in the case of Abraham. Moses, in the
maturity of life, and with everything around him that is usually
regarded by men as objects of ambition, was ready to forego it all.
So, wherever true faith exists, there is a readiness to abandon
the hope of gain, and brilliant prospects of distinction, and
fascinating pleasures, in obedience to the command of God.
(2.) Moses entered on an undertaking wholly beyond the power of man to
accomplish, and against every human probability of success. It was no
less than that of restoring to freedom two millions of downtrodden,
oppressed, and dispirited slaves, and conducting aged and feeble men,
tender females, helpless children, with numerous flocks and herds,
across barren wastes to a distant land. He undertook this against the
power of probably the most mighty monarch of his time; from the midst
of a warlike nation; and when the whole nation would be kindled into
rage at the loss of so many slaves, and when he might expect that all
the power of their wrath would descend on him and his undisciplined
and feeble hosts. He did this when he had no wealth that he could
employ to furnish provisions or the means of defence; no armies at his
command to encircle his people on their march; and even no influence
among the people himself, and with every probability that they would
disregard him. Comp. Exodus 3:11; 4:1. He did this when the whole
Hebrew people were to be aroused to willingness to enter on the great
undertaking; when there was every probability that they would meet
with formidable enemies in the way, and when there was nothing human
whatever on which the mind could fix as a basis of calculation of
success. If there ever was any undertaking commenced opposed to every
human probability of success, it was that of delivering the Hebrew
people, and conducting them to the promised land. To human view it was
quite as hopeless and impracticable as it would be now for a stranger
from Africa, claiming to be a native prince there, and to have a
commission from God, to liberate the two and a half millions of slaves
in this country, and conduct them to the land of their fathers. In all
the difficulties and discouragements of the undertaking of Moses,
therefore, his only hope of success must have arisen from his
confidence in God.
(3.) It was an undertaking where there were many certain trials before
him. The people whom he sought to deliver were poor and oppressed. An
attempt to rescue them would bring down the wrath of the mighty
monarch under whom they were. They were a people unaccustomed to
self-government, and, as the result proved, prone to ingratitude and
rebellion. The journey before him lay through a dreary waste, where
there was every prospect that there would be a want of food and water,
and where he might expect to meet with formidable enemies. In all
these things his only hope must have been in God. It was he only who
could deliver them from the grasp of the tyrant; who could conduct
them through the wilderness; who could provide for their wants in the
desert; and who could defend a vast multitude of women and children
from the enemies which they would be likely to encounter.
(4.) There was nothing in this to gratify ambition, or to promise an
earthly reward. All these prospects he gave up when he left the court
of Pharaoh. To be the leader of a company of emancipated slaves
through a pathless desert to a distant land, had nothing in itself
that could gratify the ambition of one who had been bred at the most
magnificent court on earth, and who had enjoyed every advantage which
the age afforded to qualify him to fill any exalted office. The result
showed that Moses never designed to be himself the king of the people
whom he led forth, and that he had no intention of aggrandizing his
own family in the case.
{e} "passover" Exodus 12:21
Verse 29. By faith they passed through the Red sea as by dry land.
Exodus 14:22,29. That is, it was only by confidence in God that they
were able to do this. It was not by power which they had to remove the
waters, and to make a passage for themselves; and it was not by the
operation of any natural causes. It is not to be supposed that all who
passed through the Red Sea had saving faith. The assertion of the
apostle is, that the passage was made in virtue of strong confidence
in God, that if it had not been for this confidence the passage could
not have been made at all. Of this no one can entertain a doubt who
reads the history of that remarkable transaction.
Which the Egyptians assaying to do, were drowned. Exodus 14:27,28.
Evidently referred to here as showing the effects of not
having faith in God, and of what must inevitably have befallen the
Israelites if they had had no faith. The destruction of the Egyptians
by the return of the waters, in accordance with natural laws, showed
that the Israelites would have been destroyed in the passage, if a
Divine energy had not been employed to prevent it. On the passage
through the Red Sea, see Robinson's Biblical Researches, vol..i., pp.
81--86.
{a} "passed through" Exodus 14:22,29
{*} "assaying" "attempting"
Verse 30. By faith the walls of Jericho fell down, etc.
Joshua 6:12-20. That is, it was not by any natural causes, or by
any means that were in themselves adapted to secure such a result. It
was not because they fell of themselves; nor because they were
assailed by the hosts of the Israelites; nor was it because there was
any natural tendency in the blowing of horns to cause them to fall.
None of these things were true; and it was only by confidence in God
that means so little adapted to such a purpose could have been
employed at all; and it was only by continued faith in him that they
could have been persevered in day by day, when no impression whatever
was made. The strength of the faith evinced on this occasion
appears from such circumstances as these: that there was no natural
tendency in the means used to produce the effect; that there was great
apparent improbability that the effect would follow that they might be
exposed to much ridicule from those within the city for attempting to
demolish their strong walls in this manner, and from the fact that the
city was encircled day after day without producing any result. This
may teach us the propriety and necessity of faith in similar
circumstances. Ministers of the gospel often preach where there seems
to be as little prospect of beating down the opposition in the human
heart by the message which they deliver, as there was of demolishing
the walls of Jericho by the blowing of rams' horns, They blow the
gospel trumpet from week to week and month to month, and there seems
to be no tendency in the strong citadel of the heart to yield. Perhaps
the only apparent result is to excite ridicule and scorn. Yet let them
not despair. Let them blow on. Let them still lift up their voice with
faith in God, and in due time the walls of the citadel will totter and
fall. God has power over the human heart, as he had over Jericho; and
in our darkest day of discouragement, let us remember that we are
never in circumstances indicating less probability of success,
from any apparent tendency in the means used to accomplish the result,
than those were who encompassed this heathen city. With similar
confidence in God we may hope for similar success.
{b} "Jericho" Joshua 6:12-20
Verse 31. By faith the harlot Rahab. She resided in Jericho,
Joshua 2:1. When Joshua crossed the Jordan, he sent two men as spies
to her house, and she saved them by concealment from the enemies that
would have destroyed their lives. For this act of hospitality and
kindness, they assured her of safety when the city should be
destroyed, and directed her to give an indication of her place of
abode to the invading Israelites, that her house might be spared,
Joshua 2:18,19. In the destruction of the city, she was accordingly
preserved, Joshua 6. The apostle seems to have selected this case as
illustrating the nature of faith, partly because it occurred at
Jericho, of which he had just made mention, and partly to show that
strong faith had been exercised not only by the patriarchs, and by
those who were confessed to be great and good, but by those in humble
life, and whose earlier conduct had been far from the ways of virtue.
Calvin. Much perplexity has been felt in reference to this case,
and many attempts have been made to remove the difficulty. The main
difficulty has been that a woman of this character should be
enumerated among those who were eminent for piety; and many expositors
have endeavoured to show that the word rendered harlot does not
necessarily denote a woman of abandoned character, but may be used to
denote a hostess. This definition is given by Schleusner, who says
that the word may mean one who prepares and sells food, and who
receives strangers to entertain them. Others have supposed that the
word means an idolatress, because those devoted to idolatry were
frequently of abandoned character. But there are no clear instances in
which the Greek word and the corresponding Hebrew word--\^HEBREW\^--is
used in this sense. The usual and the fair meaning of the word is that
which is given in our translation, and there is no good reason why
that signification should not be retained here. It is not implied by
the use of the word here, however, that Rahab was an harlot at the
time to which the apostle refers; but the meaning is, that this
had been her character, so that it was proper to designate her by
this appellation.
In regard to this case, therefore, and in explanation of the difficulties
which have been felt in reference to it, we may remark,
(1.) that the obvious meaning of this word here and of the
corresponding place in Joshua 2:4 is, that she had been a woman of
abandoned character, and that she was known as such. That she might
have been also a hostess, or one who kept a house of entertainment for
strangers, is at the same time by no means improbable, since it not
unfrequently happened, in ancient as well as modern times, that
females of this character kept such houses. It might have been the
fact that her house was known merely as a house of entertainment that
led the spies who went to Jericho to seek a lodging there. It would
be natural that strangers coming into a place should act in this
respect as all other travellers did, and should apply for
entertainment at what was known as a public house.
(2.) There is no improbability in supposing that her course of life
had been changed either before their arrival, or in consequence of it.
They were doubtless wise and holy men. Men would not be selected for
an enterprise like this in whom the leader of the Hebrew army could
not put entire confidence. It is not unfair, then, to suppose that
they were men of eminent piety as well as sagacity. Nor is there any
improbability in supposing that they would acquaint this female with
the history of their people, with their remarkable deliverance from
Egypt, and with the design for which they were about to invade the
land of Canaan. There is evidence that some such representations made
a deep impression on her mind, and led to a change in her views and
feelings, for she not only received them with the usual proofs of
hospitality, but jeoparded her own life in their defence, when she
might easily have betrayed them. This fact showed that she had a firm
belief that they were what they professed to be---the people of
God--and that she was willing to identify her interests with theirs.
(3.) This case--supposing that she had been a woman of bad character,
but now was truly converted--does not stand alone. Other females of a
similar character have been converted, and have subsequently led lives
of piety; and though the number is not comparatively great, yet the
truth of God has shown its power in renewing and sanctifying some at
least of this, the most abandoned and degraded class of human beings.
"Publicans and harlots," said the Saviour, "go into the kingdom of
God," Matthew 21:31. Rahab seems to have been one of them; and her
case shows that such instances of depravity are not hopeless. This
record, therefore, is one of encouragement for the most abandoned
sinners; and one too which shows that strangers, even in a public
house, may do good to those who have wandered far from God and virtue,
and that we should never despair of saving the most abandoned of our
race.
(4.) There is no need of supposing that the apostle in commending this
woman approved of all that she did. That she was not perfect is true.
That she did some things which cannot be vindicated is true also--and
who does not? But admitting all that may be said about any
imperfection in her character, (comp. Joshua 2:4,) it was still
true that she had strong faith--and that is all that the apostle
commends. We are under no more necessity of vindicating all that she
did, than we are all that David or Peter did--or all that is now done
by those who have the highest claims to virtue.
(5.) She had strong faith. It was only a strong belief that Jehovah
was the true God, and that the children of Israel were his people,
which would have led her to screen these strangers at the peril of her
own life; and when the city was encompassed, and the wails fell and
the tumult of battle raged, she showed her steady confidence in their
fidelity, and in God, by using the simple means on which she was told
the safety of herself and her family depended, Joshua 6:22,23.
With them that believed not. The inhabitants of the idolatrous
city of Jericho. The margin is, "were disobedient." The more
correct rendering, however, is, as in the text, believed not. They
evinced no such faith as Rahab had, and they were therefore destroyed.
Received the spies with peace. With friendliness and kindness,
Joshua 2:1, seq.
{c} "Rahab" Joshua 6:23
Verse 32. And what shall I more say? "There are numerous other
instances, showing the strength of faith, which there is not time to
mention."
For the time would fail me to tell. To recount all that they did;
all the illustrations of the strength and power of faith evinced in
their lives.
Of Gedeon. The history of Gideon is detailed at length in
Judges 6,7, and there can be no doubt that in his wars he was sustained
and animated by strong confidence in God.
And of Barak. Judges 4. Barak, at the command of Deborah the
prophetess, who summoned him to war in the name of the Lord,
encountered and overthrew the hosts of Sisera. His yielding to her
summons, and his valour in battle against the enemies of the Lord,
showed that he was animated by faith.
And of Samson. See the history of Samson in Judges 14-16. It is
not by any means necessary to suppose that, in making mention of
Samson, the apostle approved of all that he did. All that he commends
is his faith, and though he was a very imperfect man, and there were
many things in his life which neither sound morality nor religion can
approve, yet it was still true that he evinced, on some occasions,
remarkable confidence in God, by relying on the strength which he gave
him. This was particularly true in the instance where he made a great
slaughter of the enemies of the Lord and of his country. See
Judges 15:14; 16:28.
And of Jephthae. The story of Jephtha is recorded in Judges 11.
The mention of his name among those who were distinguished for faith,
has given occasion to much perplexity among expositors. That a man of
so harsh and severe a character, a man who sacrificed his own daughter
in consequence of a rash vow, should be numbered among those who were
eminent for piety as if he were one distinguished for piety also, has
seemed to be wholly inconsistent and improper. The same remark,
however, may be made respecting Jephtha which has been made of Samson
and others. The apostle does not commend all which they did. He does
not deny that they were very imperfect men, nor that they did many
things which can not be approved or vindicated. He commends only
one thing--their faith; and in these instances he particularly
alludes doubtless to their remarkable valour and success in delivering
their country from their foes, and from the foes of God. In this, it
is implied, that they regarded themselves as called to this work by
the Lord, and as engaged in his service; and that they went forth to
battle depending on his protection, and nerved by confidence in him as
the God of their country. Their views of God himself might be very
erroneous; their notions of religion--as was the case with
Jephtha--very imperfect and obscure; many things in their lives might
be wholly inconsistent with what we should now regard as demanded by
religion, and still it might be true that, in their efforts to deliver
their country, they relied on the aid of God, and were animated to put
forth extraordinary efforts, and were favoured with extraordinary
success from their confidence in him. In thee case of Jephtha, all
that is necessary to suppose in order to see the force of the
illustration of the apostle is, that he had strong confidence in
God--the God of his nation--and that, under the influence of this, he
made extraordinary efforts in repelling his foes. And this is not
unnatural, or improbable, even on the supposition that he was not a
pious man. How many a Greek, and Roman, and Goth, and Mohammedan, has
been animated to extraordinary courage in battle by confidence in the
gods which they worshipped! That Jephtha had this no one can doubt.
See Judges 11:29-32. Even in the great and improper sacrifice of his
only daughter; which the obvious interpretation of the record
respecting him, in Judges 11:39, leads us to suppose he made, he did
it as an offering to the Lord; and under these mistaken views of duty
he showed, by the greatest sacrifice which a man could make--that of
an only child --that he was disposed to do what he believed was
required by religion.
A full examination of the case of Jephtha, and of the question whether
he really sacrificed his daughter, may be found in Warburton's Divine
Legation of Moses, Book ix. Notes; in Bush's Notes on Judges xi.; and
in the Biblical Repository for January, 1843. It is not necessary to
go into the much-litigated inquiry here whether he really put his
daughter to death--for, whether he did or not, it is equally true that
he evinced strong confidence in God. If he did do it in obedience, as
he supposed, to duty and to the Divine command, no higher instance of
faith in God, as having a right to dispose of all that he had, could
be furnished; if he did not, his eminent valour and success in battle
show that he relied for strength and victory on the arm of Jehovah.
The single reason why the piety of Jephtha has ever been called in
question, has been the fact that he sacrificed his own daughter. If he
did not do that, no one will doubt his claims to an honoured rank
among those who have evinced faith in God.
Of David also. Commended justly as an eminent example of a man who
had faith in God, though it cannot be supposed that all that he did
was approved.
And Samuel. In early youth distinguished for his piety, and
manifesting it through his life. See 1 Sam.
And of the prophets. They were men who had strong confidence in
the truth of what God directed them to foretell, and who were ever
ready, depending on him, to make known the most unwelcome truths to
their fellow-men, even at the peril of their lives.
{*} "Gedeon" "Gideon"
{b} "Gideon" Judges 6,7
{c} "Barak" Judges 4:6
{d} "Samson" Judges 15,16
{e} "Jepthae" Judges 11:32
{+} "Jepthae" "Jepthah"
{f} "David" 1 Samuel 17:45
{g} "Samuel" 1 Samuel 7:9
Verse 33. Who through faith subdued kingdoms. That is, those
specified in the previous verses, and others like them. The meaning
is, that some of them subdued kingdoms, others obtained promises, etc.
Thus, Joshua subdued the nations of Canaan; Gideon this Midianites;
Jephtha the Ammonites; David the Philistines, Amalekites, Jebusites,
Edomites, etc.
Wrought righteousness. Carried the laws of justice into execution,
particularly on guilty nations. They executed the great purposes of
God in punishing the wicked, and in cutting off his foes.
Obtained promises. Or obtained promised blessings, (Bloomfield,
Stuart;) that is, they obtained, as a result of their faith,
promises of blessings on their posterity in future times.
Stopped the mouths of lions. As Samson, Judges 14:6; David,
1 Samuel 17:34, seq.; and particularly Daniel, Daniel 6:7, seq. To be
able to subdue and render harmless the king of the forest--the animal
most dreaded in early times--was regarded as an eminent achievement.
{a} "promises" Galatians 3:16
{b} "lions" Daniel 6:22
Verse 34. Quenched the violence of fire. As Shadrach, Meshach, and
Abednego did, Daniel 3:15-26.
Escaped the edge of the sword. As Elijah did when he fled from
Ahab, 1 Kings 19:3; as Elisha did when he was delivered from the king
of Syria, 2 Kings 6:16; and as David did when he fled from Saul.
Out of weakness were made strong. Enabled to perform exploits
beyond their natural strength, or raised up from a state of bodily
infirmity, and invigorated for conflict. Such a case as that of Samson
may be referred to, Judges 15:16; 16:26-30; or as that of Hezekiah,
2 Kings 20, who was restored from dangerous sickness by the immediate
interposition of God. See Barnes " :".
Waxed valiant in fight. Became valiant. Like Joshua, Barak, David,
etc. The books of Joshua, Judges, Samuel, and Kings, supply instances
of this in abundance.
Turned to flight the armies of the aliens. The foreigners--as the
invading Philistines, Ammonites, Moabites, Assyrians, etc.
{c} "fire" Daniel 3:25
{d} "edge of the sword" 1 Kings 19:3; 2 Kings 6:16
{*} "aliens" "of other nations"
Verse 35. Women received their dead raised to life again. As in
the case of the woman of Zarephath, whose child was restored to life
by Elijah, 1 Kings 17:19-22; and of the son of the Shunammite woman,
whose child was restored to life by Elisha, 2 Kings 4:18-37.
And others were tortured. The word which is here used \~tumpanizw\~
to tympanize, refers to a form of severe torture which was
sometimes practised. It is derived from \~tumpanon\~--tympanum --a
drum, tabret, timbrel; and the instrument was probably so called from
resembling the drum or the timbrel. This instrument consisted in the
East of a thin wooden rim covered over with skin, as a tambourine is
with us. See it described in the See Barnes "Isaiah 5:12". The engine
of torture here referred to probably resembled the drum in form, on
which the body of a criminal was bent so as to give greater severity
to the wounds which were inflicted by scourging. The lash would cut
deeper when the body was so extended, and the open gashes exposed to
the air would increase the torture. See 2 Mac. vi. 19--29. The
punishment here referred to seems to have consisted of two things--the
stretching upon the instrument, and the scourging. See Robinson's
Lex., and Stuart, in loc. Bloomfield, however, supposes that the
mode of the torture can be best learned from the original meaning of
the word \~tumpanon\~ --tympanum--as meaning
(1.) a beating-stick, and
(2.) a beating-post, which was in the form of a T, thus suggesting the
posture of the sufferer. This beating, says he, was sometimes
administered with sticks or rods; and sometimes with leather thongs
inclosing pieces of lead. The former account, however, better agrees
with the usual meaning of the word.
Not accepting deliverance. When it was offered them; that is, on
condition that they would renounce their opinions, or do what was
required of them. This is the very nature of the spirit of martyrdom.
That they might obtain a better resurrection. That is, when they
were subjected to this kind of torture they were looked upon as
certainly dead. To have accepted deliverance than, would have been a
kind of restoration to life or a species of resurrection. But they
refused this, and looked forward to a more honourable and glorious
restoration to life; a resurrection, therefore, which would be better
than this. It would be in itself more noble and honourable, and would
be permanent, and therefore better. No particular instance of this
kind is mentioned in the Old Testament; but, amidst the multitude of
cases of persecution to which good men were subjected, there is no
improbability in supposing that this may have occurred. The case of
Eleazer, recorded in 2 Mac. Vi., so strongly resembles what the
apostle says here, that it is very possible he may have had it in his
eye. The passage before us proves that the doctrine of the
resurrection was understood and believed before the coming of the
Saviour, and that it was one of the doctrines which sustained and
animated those who were called to suffer on account of their religion.
In the prospect of death under the infliction of torture on account of
religion, or under the pain produced by disease, nothing will better
enable us to bear up under the suffering than the expectation that the
body will be restored to immortal rigour, and raised to a mode of life
where it will be no longer susceptible of pain. To be raised up to
that life is a "better resurrection" than to be saved from death when
persecuted, or to be raised up from a bed of pain.
{e} "received" 1 Kings 17:22
{f} "deliverance" Acts 4:19
Verse 36. And others had trial of cruel mockings. Referring to the
scorn and derision which the ancient victims of persecution
experienced. This has been often experienced by martyrs, and
doubtless it was the case with those who suffered on account of their
religion before the advent of the Saviour as well as afterwards. Some
instances of this kind are mentioned in the Old Testament,
(2 Kings 2:23; 1 Kings 22:24;) and it was frequent in the time of the
Maccabees.
And scourging. Whipping. This was a common mode of punishment, and
was usually inflicted before a martyr was put to death.
See Barnes "Matthew 10:17", See Barnes "Matthew 27:26". For instances of
this, see Jeremiah 20:2; 2 Mac. vii. 1; v. 17.
Of bonds. Chains, Genesis 39:20.
And imprisonment. See 1 Kings 22:27; Jeremiah 20:2.
{g} "bonds" Genesis 39:20
{h} "imprisonment" Jeremiah 20:2
Verse 37. They were stoned. A common method of punishment among
the Jews. See Barnes " :". Thus Zechariah, the son of
Jehoiada the priest, was stoned. See 2 Chronicles 24:21; comp.
1 Kings 21:1-14. It is not improbable that this was often resorted to in
times of popular tumult, as in the case of Stephen, Acts 7:59;
comp. John 10:31; Acts 14:5. In the time of the terrible persecutions
under Antiochus Epiphanes, and under Manasseh, such instances also
probably occurred.
They were sawn asunder. It is commonly supposed that Isaiah was
put to death in this manner. For the evidence of this, see
Introduction to Isaiah, & 2. It is known that this mode of punishment,
though not common, did exist in ancient times. Among the Romans, the
laws of the twelve tables affixed this as the punishment of certain
crimes; but this mode of execution was very rare, since Aulius Gellius
says, that in his time no one remembered to have seen it practised. It
appears, however, from Suetonius, that the emperor Caligula often
condemned persons of rank to be sawn through the middle. Calmet,
writing above a hundred years ago, says, "I am assured that the
punishment of the saw is still in use among the Switzers, and that
they put it in practice not many years ago upon one of their
countrymen, guilty of a great crime, in the plain of Grenelles, near
Paris. They put him into a kind of coffin, and sawed him lengthwise,
beginning at the head, as a piece of wood is sawn." Pict. Bib. It was
not an unusual mode of punishment to cut a person asunder, and to
suspend the different parts of the body to walls and towers as a
warning to the living. See 1 Samuel 31:10, and Morier's Second Journey
to Persia, p. 96.
Were tempted. On this expression, which has given much perplexity
to critics, see the Notes of Prof. Stuart, Bloomfield, and Kuinoel.
There is a great variety of reading in the Mss. and editions of the
New Testament, and many have regarded it as an interpolation. The
difficulty which has been felt in reference to it has been, that it is
a much milder word than those just used, and that it is hardly
probable that the apostle would enumerate this among those which he
had just specified, as if to be tempted deserved to be
mentioned among sufferings of so severe a nature. But it seems to me,
there need be no real difficulty in the case. The apostle here, among
other sufferings which they were called to endure, may have referred
to the temptations which were presented to the martyrs, when about to
die, to abandon their religion and live. It is very possible to
conceive that this might have been among the highest aggravations of
their sufferings. We know that in latter times it was a common
practice to offer life to those who were doomed to a horrid death, on
condition that they would throw incense on the altars of a heathen
god, and we may easily suppose that a temptation of that kind,
artfully presented in the midst of keen tortures, would greatly
aggravate their sufferings. Or suppose when a father was about to be
put to death for his religion, his wife and children were placed
before him, and should plead with him to save his life by abandoning
his religion, we can easily imagine that no pain of the rack would
cause so keen torture to the soul as their cries and tears would.
Amidst the sorrows of martyrs, therefore, it was not improper to say
that they were tempted, and to place this among their most
aggravated woes. For instances of this nature, see 2 Mac. vi. 21, 22;
vii. 17, 24.
Were slain with the sword. As in the case of the eighty-five
priests slain by Doeg, (1 Samuel 22:18;) and the prophets, of whose
slaughter by the sword Elijah complains, 1 Kings 19:10.
They wandered about in sheepskins and goatskins. Driven away from
their homes, and compelled to clothe themselves in this rude and
uncomfortable manner. A dress of this kind, or a dress made of hair,
was not uncommon with the prophets, and seems indeed to have been
regarded as an appropriate badge of their office. See 2 Kings 1:8;
Zechariah 13:4.
Being destitute, afflicted, tormented. The word tormented here
means tortured. The apostle expresses here in general what in the
previous verses he had specified in detail.
{i} "stoned" Acts 7:59
Verse 38. Of whom the world was not worthy. The world was so
wicked that it had no claim that such holy men should live in it.
These poor, despised, and persecuted men, living as outcasts and
wanderers, were of a character far elevated above the world. This is a
most beautiful expression. It is at once a statement of their eminent
holiness, and of the wickedness of the rest of mankind.
They wandered in deserts, etc. On the Scripture meaning of the
word desert or wilderness, See Barnes "Matthew 3:1". This is a
description of persons driven away from their homes, and wandering
about from place to place to procure a scanty subsistence. Comp. 1
Mac, i. 53; 2 Mac. v. 27; vi. 7. The instances mentioned in the Books
of Maccabees are so much in point, that there is no impropriety in
supposing that Paul referred to some such cases, if not these very
cases. As there is no doubt about their historic truth, there was no
impropriety in referring to them, though they are not mentioned in the
canonical books of Scripture. One of those cases may be referred to as
strikingly illustrating what is here said. "But Judas Maccabeus, with
nine others, or thereabout, withdrew himself into the wilderness, and
lived in the mountains after the manner of beasts, with his company,
who fed on herbs continually, lest they should be partakers of the
pollution," 2 Mac. v. 27.
Verse 39. And these all, having obtained a good report through
faith. They were all commended and approved on account of their
confidence in God. See Barnes "Hebrews 11:2".
Received not the promise. That is, did not receive the fulfilment
of the promise; or did not receive all that was promised. They all
still looked forward to some future blessings.
See Barnes "Hebrews 11:13".
{*} "report" "an honourable testimony"
Verse 40. God having provided some better thing for us. Marg.,
foreseen. That is, "God having provided, or determined on giving
some better thing than any of them realized, and, which we are now
permitted to enjoy." That is, God gave them promises; but they were
not allowed to see their fulfilment. We are permitted now to see what
they referred to, and in part, at least, to witness their completion;
and though the promise was made to them, the fulfilment more
particularly pertains to us.
That they without us should not be made perfect. That is,
complete. The whole system of revelation was not complete at
once, or in one generation. It required successive ages to make the
system complete, so that it might be said that it was finished, or
perfect. Our existence, therefore, and the developments in our
times, were as necessary to the perfection of the system as the
promise made to the patriarchs. And as the system would not have been
complete if the blessings had been simply conferred on us without the
previous arrangements, and the long scheme of introductory measures,
so it would not have been complete if the promises had been merely
given to them without the corresponding fulfilment in our times. They
are like the two parts of a tally. The fathers had one part in the
promises, and we the other in the fulfilment, and neither would have
been complete without the other. The "better things," then, referred
to here as possessed by Christians, are the privilege of seeing those
promises fulfilled in the Messiah; the blessings resulting from his
atonement; the more expanded views which they have under the gospel;
the brighter hopes of heaven itself, and the clearer apprehension of
what heaven will be, which they are permitted to enjoy. This,
therefore, accords entirely with the argument which the apostle is
pursuing--which is, to show that the Christians whom he addressed
should not apostatize from their religion. The argument is, that in
numerous instances, as specified, the saints of ancient times, even
under fiery trials, were sustained by faith in God, and that, too,
when they had not seen the fulfilment of the promises, and when they
had much more obscure views than we are permitted to enjoy. If they,
under the influence of the mere promise of future blessings, were
enabled thus to persevere, how much more reason is there for us to
persevere, who have been permitted, by the coming of the Messiah, to
witness the perfection of the system!
There is no part of the New Testament of more value than this chapter;
none which deserves to be more patiently studied, or which may be more
frequently applied to the circumstances of Christians. These
invaluable records are adapted to sustain us in times of trial,
temptation, and persecution; to show us what faith has done in days
that are past, and what it may do still in similar circumstances.
Nothing can better show the value and the power of faith, or of true
religion, than the records in this chapter. It has done what nothing
else could do. It has enabled men to endure what nothing else would
enable them to bear; and it has shown its power in inducing them to
give up, at the command of God, what the human heart holds most dear.
And among the lessons which we may derive from the study of this
portion of divine truth, let us learn from the example of Abel to
continue to offer to God the sacrifice of true piety which he
requires, though we may be taunted or opposed by our nearest kindred;
from that of Enoch to walk with God, though surrounded by a wicked
world, and to look to the blessed translation to heaven which awaits
all the righteous; from that of Noah to comply with all the directions
of God, and to make all needful preparations for the future events
which he has predicted, in which we are to be interested--as death,
judgment, and eternity--though the events may seem to be remote, and
though there may be no visible indications of their coming, and though
the world may deride our faith and our fears; from that of Abraham to
leave country, and home, and kindred, if God calls us to, and to go
just where he commands, through deserts and wilds, and among strange
men; and like him, also, to be ready to give up the dearest objects of
our earthly affection, even when attended with all that can try or
torture our feelings of affection-- feeling that God, who gave, has a
right to require their removal in his own way; and that, however much
we may fix our hopes on a dear child, he can fulfil all his purposes
and promises to us though such a child should be removed by death;
from that of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, to regard ourselves as
strangers and pilgrims on earth, having here no permanent home, and
seeking a better country; from that of Moses to be willing to leave
all the pomp and splendour of the world, all our brilliant prospects
and hopes, and to welcome poverty, reproach, and suffering, that we
may identify ourselves with the people of God; by the remembrance of
the host of worthies who met danger, and encountered mighty foes, and
vanquished them, let us learn to go forth in our spiritual conflicts
against the enemies of our souls and of the church, assured of
victory; and from the example of those who were driven from the abodes
of men, and exposed to the storms of persecution, let us learn to bear
every trial, and to be ready, at any moment, to lay down our lives in
the cause of truth and of God. Of all those holy men who made these
sacrifices, which of them ever regretted it, when he came calmly to
look over his life, and to review it on the borders of the eternal
world? None. Not one of them ever expressed regret that he had given
up the world; or that he had obeyed the Lord too early, too
faithfully, or too long. Not Abraham, who left his country and
kindred; not Moses, who abandoned his brilliant prospects in Egypt;
not Noah, who subjected himself to ridicule and scorn for an hundred
and twenty years; and not one of those who were exposed to lions, to
fire, to the edge of the sword, or who were driven away from society
as outcasts, to wander in pathless deserts, or to take up their abodes
in caverns, ever regretted the course which they had chosen. And who
of them all now regrets it? Who, of these worthies, now looks from
heaven and feels that he suffered one privation too much, or that he
has not had an ample recompense for all the ills he experienced in the
cause of religion? So we shall feel when from the bed of death we look
over the present life, and look out on eternity. Whatever our religion
may have cost us, we shall not feel that we began to serve God too
early, or served him too faithfully. Whatever pleasure, gain, or
splendid prospects we gave up in order to become Christians, we shall
feel that it was the way of wisdom, and shall rejoice that we were
able to do it. Whatever sacrifices, trials, persecution, and pain, we
may meet with, we shall feel that there has been more than a
compensation in the consolations of religion, and in the hope of
heaven, and that by every sacrifice we have been the gainers. When we
reach heaven, we shall see that we have not endured one pain too much,
and that through whatever trials we may have passed, the result is
worth all which it has cost. Strengthened, then, in our trials by the
remembrance of what faith has done in times that are past; recalling
the example of those who through faith and patience have inherited the
promises, let us go cheerfully on our way. Soon the journey of trials
will be ended, and soon what are now objects of faith will become
objects of fruition; and in their enjoyment, how trifling and brief
will seem all the sorrows of our pilgrimage below!
{1} "having provided" "foreseen"
{a} "without us should not be made perfect" Revelation 6:11