Verses 1–4
To Live By Faith (I)
You’re at the beginning of a wonderful and an enormously encouraging chapter. Plentiful examples of persons, who has lived by faith, are written down in this chapter. Their lives have proven the power and the working of faith. Therefore the whole chapter speaks about nothing else than faith. All these examples are quoted by the writer, in order to show the Hebrews and also you what a person who lives by faith, is capable of.
This faith is not different from the one that brought you to God and with which you put your confidence in God for the forgiveness of your sins. That was the beginning of your faith. But faith always remains active. Faith in God is: trusting Him, regarding Him as faithful; having the assurance that He helps and that He does what He says. The future becomes present by faith and in that way the invisible also becomes visible. And the difficulties you are faced with are the challenges for faith. Difficulties are, as it were, food for faith; difficulties are the very causes for faith to prove itself.
Hebrews 11:1. This verse has also been called the definition of faith, but I think that this is not correct. Faith is not to be defined. Faith is the effective power in view of the future and in view of the present. Faith fixes the eye forward, to what has been promised and is absolutely sure that it will be achieved: it “is the assurance of [things] hoped for”. Faith fixes the eye up, to God and Christ: it is “the conviction of things not seen”. In other words: faith looks forward and upward.
In the Hebrews 11:1-Judges : you see that faith is the most important thing in the relationship between man and God and indeed from the beginning till the end. It deals with creation, sin and offering; life and walking to the pleasure of God; the testimony towards the world; the judgment over the world and finally the millennial kingdom of peace. In all these aspects the Son is central. Creation shows the Son as Creator. The offering shows the Son as Redeemer. A life and a walk to the pleasure of God is perfectly seen in the Son. In the world He perfectly testified Whom God is. The Son will judge the world and He will also establish the millennial kingdom of peace.
Furthermore creation points forward to the recreation of which the Son is the heir. On the basis of the offering all things will once be submitted to the Son. In the taking of Enoch (Hebrews 11:5) you see the picture of the rapture of the church, the heavenly people of God. The church is related to the Son and partakes of everything that is the part of the Son and what He will receive in the millennial kingdom of peace. Noah (Hebrews 11:7) is a type of the earthly people in the millennial kingdom, of the believers who will inherit the world through judgments.
The common thread through everything is faith. This theme connects everything together. When you summarize the Hebrews 11:1-Judges :, you can say the following. Faith sees: that the visible things came from what is not visible; that the offering is the only ground in order to exist before God; that a walk to the pleasure of God is possible by believing that He is (looking upward) and that a new world is awaiting (looking forward).
Hebrews 11:2. This is the faith that “the men of old”, the faith heroes from the Old Testament, the former generations of Israel, had. They demonstrated again and again that they were sure of what they hoped for and were convinced of what they did not see. Therefore they received the testimony from God. God gave in their conscience His approval. God still does that in everyone who lives in daily confidence in Him whatsoever the circumstance.
Hebrews 11:3. After the first two introductory verses you get examples of the effect of believing. The first example implies that only by believing you are able to understand how the worlds were framed, namely by God’s Word. There is here no mention yet of faith heroes from the Old Testament. Here it is about you, about your insight in the preparation of the world. Everything you see, is not made of something else that is seen, but emerged from the Invisible. This principle goes for everything that has to do with the practice of faith. In the life of faith nothing emerges from something that is seen around us, but only emerges from the unseen God Who also framed the worlds.
God has spoken and therefore all the visible has emerged. That’s how it works when God speaks. His speaking is full of authority and effect. He commands and it is (Genesis 1:3 etc.; Psalms 33:9). In that way He “prepared” the worlds (the world of the stars, the world of angels, the world of men), which means that He has put them in order, classified them; He put everything in its right place. The only way to “understand” this or to see it spiritually (inwardly) is by faith. Faith determines that God placed everything exactly there where He wanted it to be (Revelation 4:11). There is no mention of a gradual development (evolution) at all, concerning creation.
In this third verse all the erroneous arguments of the human spirit, who have endlessly looked for and are still looking for the existence of things, are being judged and eliminated in one phrase. The one invented system is still more foolish than the other in order to explain the things that become perfectly simple when faith acknowledges God. The universe is not a cause that is creating. It has been created itself and it functions through a law which God has imposed on it.
Hebrews 11:4. God uses His creation as a platform on which the working of faith is being displayed. Then He created man on that platform. With that man He created He wanted to have fellowship, to have contact. Through sin that has entered the world, this fellowship is cruelly disturbed. Due to this man was not able anymore to draw near to God. But even worse: man who fell into sin could not exist before God.
God should remove him from this platform. But in His love and mercy God gave a way. He made a Lamb available as a sacrifice for the fallen man, so that on this righteous ground he could still exist before the face of God. And now in Abel the example of the power of faith in the sacrifice is being presented.
Abel had the insight of someone with a conscience that was taught by God. He acknowledges God’s judgment over sin. He goes to God and confesses to be a sinner. But he comes with a substitute: an offering which he, as it were, places between himself and God. In this way he obtains the witness that he was righteous. This witness is in accordance with the righteous judgment of God. God had to exert judgment. He judged the offering and due to that Abel could go free. Not only the offering is being accepted, but Able himself too who came with the offering.
When you draw near to God through the offering of the Lord Jesus, God witnesses of the offering that it is righteous and He also witnesses to you that you are righteous. Your righteousness has the value and the perfection of the offering, which means of Christ Who offered up Himself to God. To God you are now according to the perfection of the work of Christ. What that means you already have read comprehensively in this letter.
So the first faith hero is Abel. In him you see a believer who actively presents himself to God on the ground of a substitutionary offering. Also his brother Cain is mentioned. He also brought an offering, but the offering of Abel was better or more than that of Cain. Abel’s offering had added value. The added value was the fact that Abel killed an offering according to the example that God had given after the fall of man (Genesis 3:21), while Cain came with his own good works that also came from a cursed earth.
Abel’s offering was, as it seems, not because of a special sin, but he offered it up because of the awareness that man could only exist before God on that ground. The offering of Abel was accepted. Possibly the fire from God fell on it, visibly, like what happened at the tabernacle (Leviticus 9:24), at the temple (2 Chronicles 7:1) and with the offerings from David and Elijah (1 Chronicles 21:26; 1 Kings 18:38).
Cain acknowledged the existence of God and desired to gain His favor, but he did not acknowledge to be a sinner. He turned his back to God. The difference between the persons who brought the offerings is faith. Abel’s faith and his offering made God declare him righteous.
Abel had to pay his life of faith with his death by the hand of a murderer. His testimony on earth was ended that way, but the message that was sent through it did not. That echoes through the ages in a way that was not possible in another way. God uses the work of satan entirely against the will of satan for the further glory of His Name.
Now read Hebrews 11:1-4 again.
Reflection: What do you do with faith? How does that affect you?