“They didn’t have the details of the Saviour’s birth…yet they still followed Him with courage”
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By David D Sternhagen
As we know,
all the heroes of Hebrews 11 encourage us to be faithful as we run our race of
faith.
I want to
be a hero. I think most people would like to be one. But I want to be one of
those heroes who don’t have to do much to get there. I don’t want to be a hero
because I was able to suffer a lot of pain for a long time without complaint.
Don’t make
me a hero like Abraham, who was told to sacrifice his son. Don’t make me a hero
like Jacob who struggled most of his life learning to trust God. Isn’t there
some simple thing I can do this afternoon that will make me a hero? Well,
maybe.
Unnamed
Heroes
In the
‘Heroes of Faith’ chapter of Hebrews, we get a long list of well-known heroes.
But the writer to the Hebrews ends by saying that he can’t include them all because
there have been so many. They aren’t all
named. He simply describes some of them. They “through faith conquered
kingdoms, administered justice and gained what was promised… shut the mouths of
lions… Some faced jeers and flogging while still others were chained and put in
prison. They were stoned and they were sawed in two; they were put to death by
the sword” (Hebrews 11:33-37).
I guess I don’t want to be a hero that badly –
especially the “sawed in half” variety. But actually this is the point of the
whole chapter – to use these Old Testament heroes of faith to inspire us to be
New Testament heroes.
“These were all commended for their faith, yet none of
them received what had been promised. God had planned something better for us so
that only together with us would they be made perfect” (Hebrews 11:39,40).
These
heroes didn’t know all the details of the Saviour’s birth as we do, but they
still followed Him with courage. They didn’t know exactly every incident of the
Lord’s Passion but they still thanked Him with their lives.
They didn’t
sit with the disciples and hear Jesus’ teachings or see His miracles nor were
they able to read eyewitness accounts. Yet they believed God’s Word and
followed His commandments. If they could be heroes, we certainly can too.
Present-Day
Heroes
After
naming all these heroes, the writer to the Hebrews wrote, “Since we are
surrounded by such a great cloud of witnesses… let us run with perseverance the
race marked out for us” (12:1).
So when
your walk with God seems difficult, remember Enoch, who walked with God even
though he didn’t know Him as well as you do.
When it
seems like God isn’t looking out for you, remember Abraham, who had to wait until
he was a hundred years old to have the son God promised.
When the
challenges seem too great and the pain too much think about those who lived in
caves and were sawed in half even though
they never heard Jesus say, “Come to Me, all of you who are weary and burdened,
and I will give you rest” (Matthew 11:28).
Inspired by these heroes, let us run the race set
before us. Will the next gene-ration look back and see our examples? Will they
be encouraged by the way we ran our race?
Yes. Thanks to God the Holy Spirit, people are joining
the ranks of heroes of faith every day. It is an honour to be in that number!
David D
Sternhagen is the pastor at Crown of Life, New Orleans, Louisiana and is a
contributing editor at WELS (Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod)
© Copyright
by WELS Forward in Christ 2009
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