John Eldridge, in his book, The Sacred Romance, says that deep inside of us is a longing for intimacy and adventure. Here in Hebrews 11, we definitely see both! The intimacy is with a God who spoke us into existence and now can be trusted to care for us every step of the way (we will see this again in Heb 12). And the adventure…oh my! We are part of something bigger than ourselves…and that’s exciting! We are in the “race of faith” with a long line of “runners”…some famous, like Abraham and Moses; some infamous and unlikely, like Rahab and Samson; and some unknown, like those who were sawn in two (among other horrors)…people “of whom the world is not worthy,” the writer to the Hebrews says (Hebrews 11:38).
What enables us to endure like our fellow runners? It’s faith! Not the world’s kind of faith, which makes faith a work, or a “name it and claim it,” or an “entity” in me that I need to muster up enough of to get what I want. NO!
As Andrew Murray says,
faith is confessed helplessness, casting itself on God [the living God, the “I Am”] and His promises [which are ‘yes and amen!’].”
So the nature of true, Biblical faith has to do with the unseen and the future. It is confidence in what we don’t see: God & His promises, not in what we do see: circumstances, people, things, feelings, etc.
And the outcome of faith is that it puts “a smile on God’s face”…it pleases Him. He puts His stamp of approval on us! In fact, He so loves to see faith that He witnesses to it in us…He testifies to it in His children. Remember how God boasted of Job? “Have you observed my servant Job?” That’s what God does when He sees true faith!
According to Spiro Zodiates in his Word Studies in the NT, the words “to be approved, to obtain the testimony, obtained the witness” are all the same Greek word in the passive voice (which means someone else does it). The exciting thing is that God “lauds” [dare I say, “applauds”] us and “reports well” of us because of our faith (which faith, by the way, is a gift, Ephesians 2:8-9; as is everything in life!)
So this means that God is looking for faith, not perfection! And that is good news to those of us who worship at the altar of “doing the right thing” or “doing it perfectly.” It may sound so right to try hard, be perfect, or get it right, but where is God in that picture? That sounds more like self-effort and a “works with a smidge of God” type of spirituality.
As you reflect on these far-from-perfect-people in Hebrews 11, thank God that, despite your “fluctuations of body and soul,” you can walk by faith TODAY because HE IS, and He rewards those who seek HIM…step by step…by faith!
BY FAITH Keith & Kristen Getty
By faith, we see the hand of God,
In the light of creation’s grand design,
In the lives of those who prove His faithfulness,
Who walk by faith and not by sight.
By faith, our fathers roamed the earth,
With the power of His promise in their hearts,
Of a holy city built by God’s own hand,
A place where peace and justice reign.
We will stand as children of the promise,
We will fix our eyes on Him, our soul’s reward,
Till the race is finished and the work is done,
We’ll walk by faith and not by sight.
By faith, the prophets saw a day,
When the longed-for Messiah would appear,
With the power to break the chains of sin and death,
And rise triumphant from the grave.
By faith, the church was called to go,
In the power of the Spirit to the lost,
To deliver captives and to preach good news,
In every corner of the earth.
We will stand as children of the promise,
We will fix our eyes on Him, our soul’s reward,
Till the race is finished and the work is done,
We’ll walk by faith and not by sight.
By faith, this mountain shall be moved,
And the power of the gospel shall prevail,
For we know in Christ all things are possible,
For all who call upon His name.
We will stand as children of the promise,
We will fix our eyes on Him, our soul’s reward,
Till the race is finished and the work is done,
We’ll walk by faith and not by sight.
This is an updated edition of a post originally published on abranchinthevine.com
Featured Image by Szabo Viktor on Unsplash