Verse 1
Hebrews 11:1. Knowing that the
believing Hebrews had been, and
still were exposed to
persecution on account of the
gospel, and fearing lest they
should be thereby cast down, and
moved from their steadfastness,
the apostle had endeavoured to
support them in their adherence
to Christ and his cause by
suggesting the declaration
whereby the prophet Habakkuk had
directed and encouraged the Jews
on the approach of the Chaldean
invasion, namely, the just shall
live by faith. He now proceeds
to illustrate and improve that
saying, by bringing into the
view of these Hebrews examples
from their own Scriptures of
persons who, by a strong faith
in God and in his promises,
resisted the greatest
temptations, sustained the
heaviest persecutions, were
preserved in imminent dangers,
performed most difficult acts of
obedience, and at length
obtained a distinguished reward.
This beautiful discourse,
therefore, may be considered as
an animated display of the
triumphs of faith over the
allurements and terrors of the
world. But first, to prevent all
mistakes, and to show that the
noble grace which he speaks of
is attainable by men in every
age and country, he gives a
concise but clear description of
it in the following words.
Now faith — As if he had said,
Now that you may understand what
the faith is of which I speak,
and may be encouraged to
exercise it, and to persevere in
so doing, consider its
excellence and efficacy. It is
the substance of things hoped
for — The word υποστασις, here
rendered substance, is
translated confidence, (Hebrews
3:14,) and may be rendered
subsistence, which is its
etymological meaning, and also
ground, basis, or support. The
meaning of the clause seems to
be, that faith is a confidence
that we shall receive the good
things for which we hope, and
that by it we enjoy, as it were,
a present subsistence or
anticipation of them in our
souls. It also gives a
foundation or ground for our
expecting them; because by it we
are justified, adopted into
God’s family, and born of God’s
Spirit, and, therefore, being
his children, are heirs of the
things for which we hope;
namely, of happiness with Jesus
immediately after death, of the
glorious resurrection of the
body at the time of Christ’s
second coming, of acquittance
and a gracious reception at his
judgment-seat, and felicity and
glory with him in the new
heavens and new earth for ever.
The evidence — ελεγχος, the
conviction, persuasion, or
demonstration, wrought in the
mind; of things not seen — Of
things invisible and eternal, of
God and the things of God;
giving us an assurance of them
in some respects equal to that
which our outward senses give us
of the things of this visible
and temporal world. “The word
ελεγχος,” says Macknight,
“denotes a strict proof, or
demonstration; a proof which
thoroughly convinces the
understanding, and determines
the will. The apostle’s meaning
is, that faith answers all the
purposes of a demonstration,
because, being founded on the
veracity and power of God, these
perfections are to the believer
complete evidence of the things
which God declares have
happened, or are to happen,
however much they may be out of
the ordinary course of things.”
The objects of faith, therefore,
are much more numerous and
extensive than those of hope:
the latter are only things
future, and apprehended by us to
be good; whereas those of faith
are either future, past, or
present, and those either good
or evil, whether to us or
others: such as “the creation of
the world without any
pre-existing matter to form it
of, the destruction of the old
world by the deluge, the glory
which Christ had with his Father
before the world began, his
miraculous conception in the
womb of his mother, his
resurrection from the dead, his
exaltation in the human nature
to the government of the
universe, the sin and punishment
of the angels, &c. All which we
believe on the testimony of God,
as firmly as if they were set
before us by the evidence of
sense.” The reader will easily
observe, that though the
definition of faith here given,
and exemplified in the various
instances following, undoubtedly
includes or implies justifying
faith, yet the apostle does not
here speak of it as justifying,
or treat of justification at
all, but rather shows the
efficacy and operation of faith
in them who are justified. Faith
justifies only as it refers to,
and depends on Christ, and on
the promises of God through him;
in which light it is represented
Romans 4., where the apostle
professedly describes it. But
here is no mention of him as the
object of faith: and in several
of the instances that follow no
notice is taken of him or his
salvation, but only of temporal
blessings obtained by faith; and
yet most of these instances
maybe considered as evidences of
the power of justifying faith,
and of its extensive exercise in
a course of steady obedience
amidst trials and troubles,
difficulties and dangers of
every kind. Before we proceed to
the particular instances of the
power of faith here recorded, it
may be proper to remark, that it
is faith alone which, from the
beginning of the world, under
all dispensations of divine
grace, and all the alterations
which have taken place in the
modes of divine worship, hath
been in the church the chief
principle of living unto God, of
obtaining the promises, and of
inheriting life eternal.
Verse 2
Hebrews 11:2. By it the elders —
Our forefathers, or the pious of
former ages; obtained a good
report — εμαρτυρηθησαν, received
testimony, of God’s approbation
of them, or were borne witnesses
to by God as persons accepted of
him. The word is very
comprehensive, implying that God
gave a testimony, not only of
them, but to them, and they
received his testimony, as if it
had been the things themselves,
of which he testified, Hebrews
11:4-5; Hebrews 11:39. Hence
they also gave testimony to
others, and others testified of
them. This chapter is a kind of
summary of the Old Testament, in
which the apostle comprises the
designs, labours, sojournings,
expectations, martyrdoms of the
ancients. The former of them had
a long exercise of their
patience; the latter suffered
shorter, but sharper trials.
Verse 3
Hebrews 11:3. Through faith we
understand that the worlds —
Although the expression, τους
αιωνας, generally signifies the
ages, yet here the subsequent
clause determines its
signification to the material
fabric of the world,
comprehending the sun, moon, and
stars, &c., (called by Moses the
heaven and the earth, Genesis
1:1,) by whose duration and
revolutions time, consisting of
days, months, years, and ages,
is measured; were framed —
Formed, fashioned, and finished,
as the word κατηρτισθαι implies,
properly signifying to place the
parts of any body or machine in
their right order, Ephesians
4:12. It, however, also
signifies to make, or produce,
as Hebrews 10:5, where it is
applied to the body made for
Christ. And that it here
signifies, not merely the
orderly disposition of the parts
of the universe, but their
production, is plain from the
following clause. By the word of
God — The sole command of God,
without any instrument or
preceding matter. The word ρημα,
here used, properly signifies a
word spoken, or a command. It is
nowhere used in Scripture to
denote the Son of God. His
proper title is ο λογος, the
Word. That the worlds were made
by the word, order, or command
of God, is one of the unseen
things which cannot be known but
by divine revelation. The
apostle, therefore, doubtless
refers to the Mosaic account of
the creation, Genesis 1:3, &c.,
where Moses informs us, God
said, let there be light, and
there was light, &c. As the
creation is the fountain and
specimen of the whole divine
economy, so faith in the Creator
is the foundation and specimen
of all faith; so that the things
which are seen — The earth and
heavens, with all that they
contain; were not made of things
which do appear — Or, of things
appearing, or which did appear,
as φαινομενων may be properly
rendered; that is, they were not
made of any pre-existing matter,
but of matter which God created
and formed into the things which
we see; and having formed them,
he placed them in the beautiful
order which they now hold, and
impressed on them the motions
proper to each, which they have
retained ever since. “This
account of the origin of things,
given by revelation, is very
different from the cosmogony of
the heathen philosophers, who
generally held that the matter
of which the worlds were
composed was uncreated and
eternal; consequently, being
independent of God, and not
obedient to his will, they
supposed it to be the occasion
of all the evil that is in the
world. But revelation, which
teaches us that the things which
are seen were not made of matter
which did appear before they
were made, but of matter which
God had brought into existence;
by thus establishing the
sovereignty of God over matter,
hath enlarged our ideas of his
power, and strengthened our
faith in his promises concerning
the felicity of good men in the
life to come. For the creation
of the new heavens and the new
earth, and the glories of the
city of the living God, do not,
in order to their formation,
require more power than the
creation of the present
universe; and therefore, if we
believe that the worlds were
formed by the word of God from
nothing, every other exercise of
faith will be easy to us.
Verse 4
Hebrews 11:4. By faith — In the
divine command or appointment,
signified unto him by some
supernatural revelation, and by
faith in the future Redeemer;
Abel offered a more excellent
sacrifice — The firstlings of
his flock, implying both a
confession of what his own sins
deserved, and a desire of
sharing in the great atonement;
than Cain — Whose offering
testified no such faith, but was
merely a bare acknowledgment of
God as the Creator. Macknight,
after Kennicott, translates
πλειονα θυσιαν, more sacrifice,
observing, “In this translation
I have followed the critics, who
tell us that πλειονα, in the
comparative degree, signifies
more in number rather than more
in value.” Accordingly it is
said, (Genesis 4:4,) Abel ALSO
brought of the firstlings of his
flock, and of the fat thereof;
“that is, beside the fruit of
the ground, which was one of his
gifts, he also brought the
fattest of the firstlings of his
flock; so that he offered a
sin-offering as well as a meat
or bread-offering, and thereby
showed both his sense of the
divine goodness, and of his own
sinfulness. Whereas Cain, having
no sense of sin, thought himself
obliged to offer nothing but a
meat-offering; and made it,
perhaps, not of the
first-fruits, or of the best of
the fruits.” By which faith Abel
obtained both righteousness, and
a testimony of it, God
testifying visibly that his
gifts were accepted. Moses does
not say in what manner God
testified his respect to Abel
and his offering, but from
Cain’s being very wroth, as we
learn Genesis 4:5, we may
believe it was by some outward
visible sign. And as in
after-times God testified his
acceptance of particular
sacrifices by sending down fire
upon them to consume them, it is
probable that he bore witness to
Abel’s in that way, thus giving
a token that justice seized on
the sacrifice instead of the
sinner. It is of importance to
observe, that God’s acceptance
of Abel’s sin-offering is a
proof that propitiatory
sacrifices were of divine
appointment, otherwise his
offering, being will-worship,
must have been offensive to God,
and rejected. Besides, as Hallet
justly observes, flesh not being
permitted to be eaten by men
till after the flood, Abel must
have thought it unlawful to kill
any animal, unless God had
ordered it to be killed as a
sacrifice. And by it — By his
faith; he, being dead, yet
speaketh — That a sinner is
accepted only through faith in
the great Sacrifice. See notes
on Genesis 4:3-5.
Verse 5-6
Hebrews 11:5-6. By faith — That
is, his firm faith in the being
and perfections of God,
especially his omnipresence,
omniscience, omnipotence; his
truth, justice, mercy, and
goodness; and in consequence of
that exemplary holiness which
was the fruit of this faith;
Enoch was translated — ΄ετετεθη,
was removed, namely, in a
miraculous manner, from among
men, God taking him out of this
sinful and miserable world to
himself. See notes on Genesis
5:22-24. That he should not see
death — He was changed probably
in a moment, as Elijah afterward
was, and as those saints shall
be that are found alive at
Christ’s second coming; and was
not any longer found — Among
men; an expression which implies
he was translated privately, and
that some (his relations and
friends, doubtless) sought for
him, as the sons of the prophets
sought for Elijah; (2 Kings
2:17;) because God had
translated him — To what place
these holy men were translated
is not said; but their
translation in the body, as
Macknight observes, is recorded
for an example, to assure
believers that, in due time,
they also shall live in the
heavenly country in the body,
and to excite them in that
assurance to imitate Enoch’s
faith.
For before his translation he
had this testimony — From God in
his own conscience; that he
pleased God — The verb
ευαρεστησαι, here used, occurs
only in this epistle, namely, in
this and the following verse,
and in chap. Hebrews 13:16, in
the passive voice, where it is
rendered, God is well pleased.
Three things are included in our
pleasing God; that our persons
be accepted; that our duties be
approved of; and that we have a
testimony that we are righteous
or justified, as Abel and Enoch
had, and as all true believers
have. This is that pleasing of
God which is appropriated to
faith alone, and which alone
shall receive an eternal reward.
In a lower sense, however, there
may be many acts and duties with
which, as to the matter of them,
God may be pleased, and which he
may reward in this world without
faith; as the destruction of the
house of Ahab by Jehu. Enoch
walked with God, and therefore
is said to please him; that is,
he set God always before him,
and thought, spoke, and acted as
one that considered he was
always under God’s eye, and he
made it his daily business to
worship and serve him
acceptably.
But without faith — In the
being, attributes,
superintending providence, and
grace of God; it is impossible —
For a fallen, sinful, and weak
creature, such as man is, and
such as Enoch undoubtedly was;
to please him — Though no
particular revelation is
mentioned as the object of
Enoch’s faith, yet from Moses’s
telling us that he walked with,
or pleased God, it is certain
that his faith in those
doctrines of religion, which are
discoverable by the light of
nature, and which are mentioned
in this verse, must have been
very strong, since it led him
habitually to walk with God, so
as to please him; for he that
cometh to God — In prayer, or
any other act of worship, or who
endeavours to serve him; must
believe that he is — That he
exists, and that he is a
rewarder of them who diligently
seek him — And therefore, that
he is wise and mighty, holy,
just, and good. “By representing
the existence of God and his
government of the world as
objects of faith, the apostle
hath taught us, that the truths
of natural religion are equally
the objects of faith with the
truths of revelation. And this
doctrine is just. For the
evidence by which the truths of
natural religion are supported,
being of the same kind with the
evidence which supports the
truths of revelation, namely,
not demonstrative, but probable
evidence, the persuasion
produced by that kind of
evidence in matters of natural
religion, is as really faith as
the persuasion which the same
evidence produces in matters of
revelation. Further, the faith
or persuasion of the truths of
natural religion which men
attain, being as much the effect
of attention, impartial search,
and prayer, as the faith which
they attain of the truths of
revelation, it is as much a
matter of duty, and as pleasing
to God, [as far as it extends,]
as faith in the truths of
revelation.” — Macknight.
Verse 7
Hebrews 11:7. By faith Noah —
The third person mentioned in
Scripture, to whom testimony was
particularly given that he was
righteous; and therefore, the
apostle brings him forward as a
third example of the power and
efficacy of faith, declaring
also wherein his faith wrought
and was effectual. Being warned
of God — χρηματισθεις,
literally, being admonished by a
divine oracle, or by a
particular and express
revelation; of which see Genesis
6:13; of things not seen as yet
— That is, not only as being
future, but of such a nature
that no one had ever seen or
heard of any thing like them,
namely, the dissolution of the
world by a flood, and the
destruction of all its
inhabitants; yet this discovery
Noah received with faith, a
discovery which had two parts;
the first, a declaration of the
purpose of God to destroy the
whole world; the second, a
direction respecting the steps
which Noah was to take for the
preservation of his family from
the impending ruin. Accordingly
it had a two-fold effect on
Noah; producing, 1st, Fear from
the threatening; 2d, Obedience
in building the ark, according
to the direction. The
application of this example of
Noah to these Hebrews was highly
proper and reasonable; for they
stood now on their trial,
whether they would be influenced
by faith or unbelief; for here
they might see, as in a glass,
what would be the effect of the
one and the other. Moved with
fear — ευλαβηθεις, a religious,
reverential, and awful fear;
prepared an ark — Doubtless
amidst many insults of profane
and wicked men, the preparing of
such a vessel, or any thing like
it, being a new thing on the
earth, and not to be effected
without immense labour and cost;
to the saving — εις σωτηριαν,
for the salvation; of his house
— We have here an instance in
which salvation signifies a
temporal deliverance. By the
which — δι ης, by which faith,
or by which ark, for the
relative may agree with either;
he condemned the world — Who
neither believed nor feared.
Persons are said, in other
places of Scripture, to condemn
those against whom they furnish
matter of accusation and
condemnation. See Titus 3:11. It
appears, from 2 Peter 2:5, that
during the time in which the ark
was building, Noah was a
preacher of righteousness to the
people of that generation,
calling them to repentance, and
warning them of approaching
destruction, if they remained
impenitent; and that on the
ground of the revelation which
God had made to him, with which
he doubtless acquainted them.
But all the time of warning,
being carnally secure, and
unmoved by his threatenings,
they continued to be
unbelieving, impenitent, and
disobedient, even to the last
hour, Matthew 24:38-39; for
which cause they were not only
destroyed temporally, but shut
up in the everlasting prison, 1
Peter 3:19-20. And became heir —
A partaker of; the righteousness
which is by faith — And entitled
to the rewards thereof in a
future and eternal world, of
which his temporal deliverance,
though so amazing, was only an
emblem. “The faith of Noah is
proposed for our imitation, to
assure us that they who believe
and obey God shall be safe in
the midst of a fallen world,
while the wicked shall be
condemned and destroyed.”
The apostle has now passed
through the first period of
Scripture records from the
beginning of the world to the
flood; and therein hath
considered the examples of all,
concerning whom it is testified
in particular that they pleased
God; and he hath shown, that
they all pleased him, and were
righteous, by faith; and that
their faith was effectual to
preserve them in that state of
divine favour, by enabling them
to persevere in the practice of
all the duties required of them,
notwithstanding the difficulties
and oppositions they met with.
Hereby he confirms his doctrine
respecting the necessity and
efficacy of faith, and proves to
these Hebrews, that if they did
not persevere in their
profession, it was because of
their unbelief, seeing that true
faith would certainly render
them steadfast in their
adherence to it, whatever
difficulties they should have to
encounter. Hence he proceeds to
the next period, (extending from
the renovation of the world in
the family of Noah to the giving
of the law,) to manifest that in
every state of the church the
way of pleasing God was one and
the same; as also that faith
still retained its efficacy
under all economical
alterations. The person whom, in
this period, he first speaks of
as having a testimony in the
Scripture of being righteous, is
Abraham; on whose example, by
reason of the eminence of his
person, the relation of the
Hebrews to him, (deriving from
him, under God, all their
privileges, temporal and
spiritual,) the efficacy of his
faith with the various
successful exercises of it, he
dwells at large from hence to
the end of Hebrews 11:18.
Verse 8
Hebrews 11:8. By faith — In the
divine promises; Abraham when he
was called — The call here
intended is referred to Genesis
12:1; to go out — From his
father’s house and native land;
into a place far distant, which
God promised he should afterward
receive for an inheritance —
Without disputing or murmuring,
obeyed; and — Relying on the
power and veracity of God; went
out, not knowing whither he went
— Although he did not know the
country to which he was going,
nor whether it was a good or a
bad land.
Verse 9-10
Hebrews 11:9-10. By faith, &c. —
Believing that Canaan was
promised to him and his seed
only as a type of a better
country, he acquired no
possessions therein except a
burying-place, and built no
houses there; but sojourned in
the land of promise as in a
strange country — αλλοτιαν, a
country belonging to others,
dwelling in tents, as a
sojourner; with Isaac and Jacob
— Who by the same manner of
living showed the same faith.
Jacob was born fifteen years
before the death of Abraham, as
is evident from the account of
the lives of the patriarchs
given in Genesis. Isaac and
Jacob are said to be heirs with
Abraham of the same promise,
because they all had the same
interest therein; and Isaac did
not receive this inheritance
from Abraham, nor Jacob from
Isaac, but all of them from God.
In saying that Abraham dwelt in
tents with Isaac and Jacob, the
apostle does not mean that they
all three dwelt together in one
family, and one place, while
they were in Canaan; for Abraham
and Isaac had separate
habitations when Jacob was born.
But he means that, while in
Canaan, they all dwelt in tents;
and by applying this observation
to the two latter, as well as to
Abraham, the apostle praises
their faith likewise. For, since
Canaan belonged to them as joint
heirs with their father, by
dwelling there in tents as
sojourners, they showed that
they also knew the true meaning
of the promise, and looked for a
better country than Canaan. For
he looked for — He expected at
length to be led on to; a city
which hath foundations — Whereas
a tent hath none. Grotius thinks
Abraham hoped that his posterity
should have, in the land of
promise, a city that God would
prepare for them, in a special
manner, namely, Jerusalem. But
such an interpretation Isaiah ,
1 st, Expressly contrary to the
exposition given by the apostle
himself of this expression,
Hebrews 11:16 : 2d, It is not
suitable to God’s dealing with
Abraham, and to the nature and
effects of the holy patriarch’s
faith, that he should have
nothing to encourage him in his
pilgrimage but a hope that,
after many generations, his
posterity should have a city to
dwell in, in the land of Canaan,
wherein the condition of most of
them was not better than his in
tents: 3d, To suppose that this
was only an earthly city, not to
be possessed by his posterity
until eight hundred years
afterward, and that but for a
limited time, is utterly to
overthrow his faith, the nature
of the covenant of God with him,
and his being an example to
gospel believers, as he is here
proposed to be. This city,
therefore, which Abraham looked
for, is that heavenly city, that
everlasting mansion, which God
hath prepared for all true
believers with himself after
this life; it being the place of
their everlasting abode, rest,
and refreshment, and that with
the expectation of which Abraham
and the following patriarchs
comforted and supported
themselves amidst all the toil
and labour of their pilgrimage.
Whose builder and maker is God —
Of which God is the sole
contriver, former, and finisher.
“The word τεχνιτης, translated
builder, denotes one who
constructs any house or machine;
an architect. But the other
word, δημιουργος, signifies one
who forms a people by
institutions and laws. The
apostle joins this term to the
other to show that God is both
the Founder and the Ruler of
that great community of which
the spiritual seed of Abraham is
to make a part. From God’s being
both the Founder and Ruler of
the city which the seed of
Abraham are to possess, it may
justly be inferred that the
glory, security, privileges, and
pleasures of their state are
such, that in comparison of
them, the advantages or security
found in any city or
commonwealth on earth are
nothing, and but of a moment’s
duration.” — Macknight.
Verse 11-12
Hebrews 11:11-12. Through faith
also Sara — Though at first she
laughed at the promise through
unbelief; received strength —
εις καταβολην σπερματος, for the
conception of seed; and was
delivered of a child when she
was past age — That is, beyond
the due time of age for such a
purpose, when she was ninety
years old, and in the course of
nature absolutely incapable of
being a mother. “I believe,”
says Dr. Owen, “that this was
not a mere miraculous
generation, but that she
received a general restoration
of her nature for the production
of a child, which was before
decayed, as Abraham afterward,
who, after his body was in a
manner dead, received strength
to have many children by
Keturah.” Because she judged him
faithful who had promised — And
that, as he could, so he would
fulfil his promise, whatever
difficulties might stand in the
way of its fulfilment. Therefore
— By this mighty principle of
faith in her and in Abraham;
sprang there even of one — Of
one father; and him as good as
dead —
Till his strength was
supernaturally restored; so many
as the stars of the sky in
multitude — This expression was
first used by God himself, who
brought Abraham forth abroad,
and bade him look toward heaven,
and number the stars, if he were
able; and then said, So shall
thy seed be. It is evident that
at the first view, as they were
shown to Abraham, not being
reduced into constellations,
there can perhaps be no greater
appearance of what is
innumerable, than the stars.
Probably too in this comparison
not only their number, but their
beauty and order were intended.
In the other allusion, as the
sand which is by the sea-shore,
they are declared to be
absolutely innumerable. It is
not said that they shall be as
many as the sand by the
sea-shore, but as innumerable,
to which the event wonderfully
corresponded.
Verse 13
Hebrews 11:13. These all —
Namely, Abraham and Sarah, with
their children, Isaac and Jacob;
died in faith — Believing that
God would fulfil his promises;
but not having received the
promises — That is, the things
promised, for which the word
promises is here put by a usual
metonymy. For the promises being
made to Abraham personally, and
to his immediate descendants,
the apostle could not say of
them that they died, not having
received the promises; but he
might justly say, they died not
having received the things
promised. For they neither
received the possession of
Canaan before their death, nor
the actual exhibition of Christ
in the flesh, with the
privileges granted to the church
in consequence thereof, which
the apostle had so fully set
forth in the four preceding
chapters. This was that better
thing provided for us under the
New Testament, that they without
us should not be made perfect.
But having seen them afar off —
At a great distance of time; as
sailors, says Chrysostom, who
after a long voyage, descry at a
great distance, with much joy,
their intended port. This makes
it further evident that the
things promised, and not the
promises themselves, are
intended; for the promises were
not afar off, but present with
them. They saw the things
promised in that they had the
idea of them in their minds,
understanding in general the
mind of God in his promises. And
were persuaded of them — Namely,
that such things as they had an
idea of were promised, and that
the promises would be fulfilled
in due time; and embraced them —
With the most cordial affection
and greatest ardour of mind. The
original word denotes the
affectionate salutations and
embracings of friends after a
long separation. We then embrace
the promises, and promised
blessings, when our hearts
cleave to them with confidence,
love, complacency, and delight,
the never-failing fruit of faith
in them. This, and not a mere
naked barren assent to divine
revelation, was the faith
whereby the elders obtained a
good report. And confessed that
they were strangers and pilgrims
on the earth — That their
interest, hopes, and enjoyments
were not in this world, but in
another which they expected. In
other words, These
heavenly-minded men, knowing
well that a better country than
any on earth was promised to
them under the figure of Canaan,
considered their abode in Canaan
and on the earth as a pilgrimage
at a distance from their native
country; and to show what their
expectations were, they always
spake of themselves as strangers
and pilgrims. See the passages
referred to in the margin.
Verses 14-16
Hebrews 11:14-16. For they that
say such things — That speak of
themselves as strangers and
pilgrims; declare plainly that
they seek a country — Different
from that in which they dwell.
Or rather, that they seek their
own, or their father’s country,
as πατριδα, the word here used,
signifies. They show that they
keep in view, and long for,
their eternal home. And truly if
they had been mindful of that
country — Ur, of the Chaldees;
from whence they came out, they
might have had opportunity to
have returned — From the call of
Abraham to the death of Jacob
there were two hundred years, so
that they had time enough for a
return if they had had a mind to
it; there was no external
difficulty in their way by force
or opposition; the way was not
so far, but that Abraham sent
his servant thither out of
Canaan, and Jacob went the same
journey with his staff. The fact
is, all love to, and desire
after their native country, was
so mortified in these holy men,
by faith influencing them to act
in obedience to the call of God,
that no remembrance of their
first enjoyments, no impressions
from their native air and soil,
no bonds of consanguinity among
the people, nor difficulties
they met with in their
wanderings, could kindle in them
any peculiar love and attachment
of their native place. Abraham
in particular considered the
very thought of returning into
Chaldea as a renunciation of his
interest in the promises of God;
and therefore he made his
servant Eliezer swear, that on
no pretence whatever would he
carry Isaac into Chaldea,
Genesis 24:5-8. This absolute
renunciation of Chaldea,
notwithstanding God gave Abraham
none inheritance in Canaan, no,
not so much as to set his foot
on, (Acts 7:5,) is a strong
proof of his knowledge of the
true meaning of the promises,
and of his faith in them. But
now they desire — Or desired,
rather; ορεγονται, they strongly
desired, they lounged after; a
better country — Than Chaldea;
that is, a heavenly — Which God
hath promised to them. This is a
full, convincing proof that the
patriarchs had a revelation and
promise of eternal life and
felicity in heaven. Wherefore
God is not ashamed to be called
their God — Which, speaking
after the manner of men, he
would have been, if he had
provided nothing better for them
than what he gave them to enjoy
on earth. Or if they had been
content with, and attached to,
earthly things. But since by
faith they sought after a better
inheritance, on the possession
of which they entered partly at
death, and shall more fully
enter when their bodies are
conformed to Christ’s glorious
body, therefore God counts it no
disparagement to or reflection
upon his greatness and majesty,
to own himself to be a God in
covenant with them, since he has
provided eternal life, felicity,
and glory for them. Or, as
Macknight states the case, “He
might have been ashamed of the
name [of their God] if Abraham,
Isaac, and Jacob, to whom as
their God he had promised
Canaan, but who had died without
receiving the possession of it,
are not to be raised from the
dead to enjoy the country
promised under the emblem of
Canaan. The reason is, in the
sense which the name of God
bears in the covenant, he cannot
be the God of the dead; he can
neither bestow the possession of
Canaan, nor of the country
prefigured by Canaan, on persons
who are dead. But he is the God
of the living; he can bestow
that country on living persons
who, by the reunion of soul and
body, are capable of enjoying
it. And that he can restore to
Abraham and to his seed their
bodies, to enable them to enjoy
the [heavenly] Canaan, is
undeniable; because all who now
live in the body, live merely by
his will and power; all live by
him.”
Verse 17-18
Hebrews 11:17-18. By faith —
Namely, by believing that God
would perform his promise of
giving him a numerous issue,
notwithstanding that the command
here referred to seemed to
contradict and preclude the
performance of it; Abraham, when
he was tried — When God made
that glorious trial of him,
recorded Genesis 22:9-10;
offered up Isaac —
“In this trial of Abraham’s
faith, there was the highest
wisdom. For God, to whom all his
creatures belong, and who may
justly take away the life of any
of them by whatever means or
instruments he thinks fit,
ordered Abraham with his own
hands to sacrifice his only son
Isaac, in whom all the promises
were to be fulfilled, that the
greatness of Abraham’s
understanding, faith, and piety,
becoming conspicuous, future
generations might know with what
propriety God made him the
pattern of the justification of
mankind, and the father of all
believers, for the purpose of
their receiving the promises in
him. The sacrifice of Isaac was
commanded also for the purpose
of being a type of the sacrifice
of Christ.” Isaac, indeed, was
not sacrificed: but Abraham, in
the full resolution of obeying
God’s command, proceeded so far
as to show that if he had not
been hindered by God himself, he
would actually have obeyed it.
For he bound Isaac, laid him on
the altar, stretched forth his
hand, and took the knife to slay
his son, Genesis 22:10. Now,
though Abraham was restrained
from killing Isaac, his firm
purpose to offer him was
considered by God as equivalent
to the actual offering of him,
Genesis 22:16 : Because thou
hast done this thing, and hast
not withheld thy son, thine only
son. But if Abraham, at God’s
command, was willing himself to
slay his only son, how much more
willing should we be to part
with our beloved children and
friends when God himself takes
them from us by death? And he
that had received the promises —
That his seed should be as the
stars, and should inherit
Canaan, and that all the nations
of the earth should be blessed
in his seed; offered up his
only-begotten — Isaac is so
called, because Abraham had no
other son by Sarah, his
legitimate wife; of whom it was
expressly said, (Genesis 21:12,)
In Isaac shall thy seed be
called — From him shall the
blessed seed spring; and in him
all the promises which I have
made to thy seed shall be
fulfilled. Observe here, reader,
“1st, Faith must be tried; and
of all graces it is most suited
to trial: 2d, God proportions
trials, for the most part, to
the strength of faith: 3d, Great
trials, in believers, are an
evidence of great faith, though
not understood, either by
themselves or others, before
such trials: 4th, Trials are the
only touchstone of faith,
without which men must want the
best evidence of its sincerity
and efficacy, and the best way
of testifying it to others.
Wherefore, 5th, We ought not to
be afraid of trials, because of
the admirable advantages of
faith by them. See James 1:2;
James 1:4; 1 Peter 1:6-7. And
6th, Let them be jealous over
themselves who have had no
special instances of the trial
of their faith: 7th, True faith,
being tried, will in the issue
be victorious.” — Owen.
Verse 19
Hebrews 11:19. Accounting —
λογισαμενος, reasoning, or
concluding, after weighing all
circumstances; that,
notwithstanding the apparent
contradiction in the divine
revelations; God was able to
raise him up —
Although he should be burned to
ashes; and would raise him even
from the dead — Though, so far
as we can learn, there never had
been one single instance of a
resurrection from the dead in
the world. From whence also he
received him in a figure — That
is, Figuratively speaking, or in
a figure or resemblance of the
resurrection from the dead, as
being hindered from slaying him.
For Abraham having fully
purposed to sacrifice him, and
his intention and action being
considered by God as a real
offering of him up, he might
with propriety be said to
receive him from the dead when
he was stopped from slaying him.
This is a much more natural
interpretation of the clause
than to understand it, as many
do, of his receiving him at his
birth by a kind of miracle, as
it were, from the dead bodies of
those who, in a course of
nature, had no hope of children;
for this could with no propriety
be termed a resurrection, or a
receiving him from the dead, as
he had had no prior existence.
To this may be added, that the
miraculous birth of Isaac was
not so proper a type of a
resurrection as his deliverance
from death was; being rather an
image of a creation than of a
resurrection. It may not be
improper to observe here, that
the phrase εν παραβολη, which we
render in a figure, and which is
literally, in, or for a parable,
is understood by Warburton to
signify, that this whole
transaction was parabolical, or
typical, of the method God would
take for the salvation of
mankind, namely, in giving up
his only-begotten Son to be a
sacrifice for the expiation of
human guilt. And certainly, when
all the circumstances of this
extraordinary fact are
considered, Abraham’s offering
up Isaac will appear to be a
most apt emblem of the sacrifice
of the Son of God. “Isaac was
Abraham’s only-begotten. This
only-begotten son he voluntarily
gave unto death at the
commandment of God: Isaac bare
the wood on which he was to be
burned as a sacrifice, and
consented to be offered up; for
he made no resistance when his
father bound him, which shows
that Abraham had made known to
him the divine command. Three
days having passed between God’s
order to sacrifice Isaac, and
the revoking of that order,
Isaac may be said to have been
dead three days. Lastly, his
deliverance, when on the point
of being slain, was, as the
apostle observes, equal to a
resurrection. In all these
respects, this transaction was a
fit emblem of the death of the
Son of God as a sacrifice, and
of his resurrection on the third
day. And it is probable that
after Isaac was offered, when
God confirmed his promises to
Abraham by an oath, he showed
him that his seed, in whom all
the nations of the earth were to
be blessed, was to die as a
sacrifice for the sin of the
world; and that he had commanded
him to offer up Isaac to
prefigure that great event, and
to raise in mankind an
expectation of it. How,
otherwise, can we understand our
Lord’s words to the Jews, Your
father Abraham rejoiced to see
my day, and he saw it, and was
glad? For Christ’s day denotes
the things done by Christ in his
day, and especially his dying as
a sacrifice for sin.” —
Macknight.
Verse 20-21
Hebrews 11:20-21. By faith — By
firmly believing what God had
revealed unto him concerning the
future state of his children;
Isaac blessed Jacob and Esau —
Prophetically foretold the
particular blessings they should
receive, preferring the younger
before the elder. See notes on
Genesis 27:6-40. By faith Jacob,
when a dying — That is, when
near death, believing that God
would make good his promise of
giving his posterity the land of
Canaan; blessed both the sons of
Joseph — Foretelling that two
tribes should spring from these
two sons; and that the tribe of
Ephraim, the younger, should be
more powerful than the tribe of
Manasseh, the elder; and
worshipped — Acknowledged God’s
goodness to him, which he had so
long experienced; leaning — Or
bowing down; on the top of his
staff — In the passage referred
to, (Genesis 47:31,) it is said,
according to our version: Israel
bowed himself upon his bed’s
head; but the apostle says here,
He worshipped upon the top of
his staff; which agrees with the
Greek and Syriac translation. It
seems, as Hallet observes, the
word משׂה, used in Genesis,
signifies either a bed or a
staff; and the passages may be
reconciled by supposing that he
was sitting on the side of the
bed when he blessed these sons
of Joseph, and leaned on the top
of his staff for support, being
very old and feeble.
Verse 22
Hebrews 11:22. By faith — In
God’s promise, to give Canaan to
the posterity of Jacob; Joseph,
when he died — τελευτων, ending
his life; made mention of the
departing of Israel — Namely,
out of Egypt, as an event which
would certainly take place; and
gave commandment concerning his
bones — To be carried into the
land of promise, thereby
testifying his joint interest
with them in the promises of
God.
Verse 23
Hebrews 11:23. By faith Moses —
As if he had said, The parents
of Moses believing, when he was
a child, that God would make use
of him at a future period, for
some extraordinary service to
his people; hid him three months
— In their own house, to
preserve him from falling a
sacrifice to the cruelty of
Pharaoh. It appears by this,
that both his parents were
engaged in the work of
concealing him, although his
mother only is mentioned, Exodus
2:2; because they saw he was a
proper child — Greek, ειδον
αστειον το παιδιον, they saw the
child beautiful; and doubtless
through a divine presage of
things to come, and not merely
from his beauty, believed that
God had designed him for some
singular usefulness. And they
were not afraid of the king’s
commandment — Requiring all
Israelitish parents, on pain of
death, to give up their male
children that they might be
thrown into the river. Of
Moses’s beauty, see note on Acts
7:20.
Verses 24-26
Hebrews 11:24-26. By faith Moses
— None in the old world was more
signalized by Providence in his
birth, education, and actions,
than Moses; hence his renown was
both then and ever after very
great; when he was come to years
— ΄εγας γενομενος, when he
became great; Syriac, when he
was a man. The word may respect
either state and condition, or
time of life and stature. To
become great, is in Scripture
and common speech, to become so
in wealth, honour, or power, and
so Moses was become great in the
court of Pharaoh; and hence the
greatness of his self-denial
here commended. But although
this is true, and is a
circumstance which greatly
commends his faith, yet it is
not primarily intended in this
expression; for having declared
the faith of his parents, and
the providence of God toward him
in his infancy, in the foregoing
verse, the apostle here shows
what his own disposition and
practice was, after he was grown
up to years of understanding.
The expression is the same with
that used by the LXX. Exodus
2:11, where we read, In those
days when Moses was grown. The
time referred to seems to have
been that mentioned by Stephen,
Acts 7:7, when he left the court
of Pharaoh, and visited his
brethren, being learned in all
the wisdom of the Egyptians, and
full forty years old; refused to
be called — Any longer, as he
had before been; the son of
Pharaoh’s daughter — It is not
said in the history that Moses
made this refusal formally, but
he did it in effect by his
actions; he boldly professed
himself an Israelite, and
interposed to vindicate his
brethren from their oppression;
at the same time leaving
Pharaoh’s court, and (after
killing the Egyptian who had
smitten a Hebrew) fleeing into
the land of Midian. And though
he afterward returned to Egypt,
he did not reside with Pharaoh’s
daughter as formerly, but went
among his afflicted brethren,
and never afterward forsook
them; choosing rather to suffer
affliction with the people of
God — Greek, συγκακουχνεισθαι,
to be evil entreated, or pressed
with things evil and grievous.
What the afflictions and
sufferings of the people of God
were at that time in Egypt is
well known: but it does not
appear that it was required of
Moses to work in the kilns and
furnaces with his brethren; but
considering their woful
condition he sympathized with
them, and was willing to suffer
with them whatever they might be
exposed to in the course of
divine providence. To account
for this exercise of faith in
Moses; we must suppose that in
his childhood and youth he had
often conversed with his parents
and with the Israelites, of whom
he knew himself to be one by his
circumcision; and that they had
given him the knowledge of the
true God, the God of their
fathers, and of the promises
which God had made to their
nation as his people. Than to
enjoy the pleasures of sin for a
season — προσκαιρον εχειν
αμαρτιας απολαυσιν, literally,
to have the temporary fruition,
or enjoyment of sin. The
enjoyment of sin is therefore
said to be temporary, or for a
season, because it is subject to
a thousand interruptions and
reverses in this life,
unavoidably ends with it, and is
followed, if repentance prevent
not, with everlasting misery.
Thus were things truly
represented to the thoughts of
Moses; he did not shut his eyes
on calamities to be endured on
the one hand, nor suffer himself
to be imposed upon by flattering
appearances on the other. He
omitted no circumstance that
might produce a right choice. He
considered the worst thing
belonging to the people of God,
which is their affliction, and
the best of the world, which is
but the vanishing pleasure of
sin; and he preferred the worst
of the one above the best of the
other. Esteeming the reproach of
Christ — So he terms the infamy
that he was or might be exposed
to, by acknowledging himself one
of the Israelites, whom Christ
had been pleased to take under
his special protection. Or he
may mean the scoffs cast on the
Israelites for expecting the
Messiah to arise among them:
greater riches than the
treasures of Egypt — Though then
a very opulent kingdom. It is
here intimated, that if Moses
had continued in the court of
Egypt, as a son of Pharaoh’s
daughter, he might have had the
free use of the king’s
treasures, and therewith might
have procured to himself every
sensual enjoyment. For he had
respect unto — απεβλεπε, he
looked off, from all those
perishing treasures, and beyond
all those temporal hardships;
unto the recompense of reward —
Not to an inheritance in Canaan:
he had no warrant from God to
look for this, nor did he ever
attain it; but what his
believing ancestors looked for,
a future state of happiness in
heaven.
Verse 27
Hebrews 11:27. By faith —
Namely, in the power of God to
preserve and conduct him and
them, notwithstanding Pharaoh’s
rage and threatening; he forsook
Egypt — Taking all the
Israelites with him; not fearing
the wrath of the king — As he
did many years before, when he
fled from Egypt into Midian: see
Exodus 2:14-15. For he endured —
Continued resolute and
immoveable; as seeing him who is
invisible — Keeping the eye of
his mind continually fixed on
that great invisible Being,
whose presence and friendship is
of such importance, that the
person who fixes his regards on
him, will never by any
consideration be influenced
knowingly to offend him, nor be
much impressed with the fear of
any person or thing that would
tempt him to do this. This
character of God is here given
with peculiar propriety. Moses
was now in that condition, and
had those difficulties to
encounter, wherein he
continually stood in need of
divine power and assistance:
whence this should come he could
not discern by his senses: his
bodily eye could behold no
present assistant; for God was
invisible: but he saw him by
faith, whom he could not see
with his bodily eyes, and thus
seeing him he found him a
present help, no less than if he
had been manifest to his senses.
A double act of Moses’s faith is
intended herein; 1st, A clear,
distinct view and apprehension
of God’s omnipresence, power,
and faithfulness; and, 2d, A
steady trust in him on account
of these perfections. This he
relied on, to this he trusted,
that God was everywhere present
with him, able to protect and
assist him, and faithful to his
promises. Of these things he had
as certain a persuasion, as if
he had seen God working with him
and for him with his bodily
eyes. This sense of God he
continually had recourse to in
all his hazards and
difficulties, and thereby
endured courageously to the end.
Verse 28-29
Hebrews 11:28-29. Through faith
— From a lively apprehension and
firm persuasion of the benefits
signified and sealed thereby,
and especially that God would
assuredly send his angel on the
vindictive design predicted, and
would spare the houses properly
distinguished; see Exodus 12:12;
Exodus 12:23; he kept the
passover and the sprinkling — Or
pouring forth, rather; of blood
— Namely, that of the paschal
lamb, which he sprinkled on the
lintels and the posts of the
doors, as the mark of committing
those who dwelt under such roofs
to the divine protection; that
he who destroyed the firstborn —
That is, the angel, whom God
employed in that work as the
executioner of his judgments, as
he did afterward in the
destruction of Sennacherib’s
army, and of Sodom; should not
touch them — That is, the
Israelites or their cattle. By
faith they — Moses, Aaron, and
the Israelites; passed through
the Red sea — That part of the
Ethiopic ocean which lies
between Egypt and Arabia. In the
Hebrew it is constantly called
ים שׂוŠ, the sea of sedges,
reeds or canes, from the
multitude growing on its shore,
as to this day. The Greeks
called it ερυθραιος, or ερυθρα,
red, not from the red colour of
the waters, appearing so from
the sand or the sun, but because
it washed the borders of Edom,
which signifies red: as by dry
land — As sedately as if they
had marched on dry land, while
its waters, by the divine
command, divided and left the
channel bare to them, so that
they easily completed their
march through it, and arrived
safely on the opposite shore:
which the Egyptians, assaying to
do, were destroyed —
κατεποθησαν, were drowned,
swallowed up. This attempt of
the Egyptians was the greatest
height of folly and presumption
that ever obdurate sinners
arrived at in this world. They
had seen all the mighty works
which God had wrought in behalf
of his people among them; they
and their country were almost
consumed with the plagues and
judgments that were inflicted on
them; and yet now, beholding
this wonderful work of God in
opening the sea to receive his
people from their pursuit, they
would make a venture, (as the
original expression, πειραν
λαβοντες, signifies,) to follow
them into it. Vain and desperate
attempt! and a high evidence of
infatuation! It is one of the
most signal examples of
blindness of mind, confirmed by
judicial hardness of heart, that
is upon record in the whole book
of God; nor is there any
monument of equal folly and
infatuation among the annals of
time. Thus far the examples are
cited from Genesis and Exodus;
those that follow are from the
former and the latter prophets.
Verse 30
Hebrews 11:30. By faith — The
faith of Joshua and the
Israelites in God’s promise; the
walls of Jericho fell down —
Being smitten by the hand of
God, without any human force;
after they were compassed about
— In solemn silence, according
to the divine command; seven
days — How absurd a spectacle
soever their procession might
appear to the besieged. “As the
land of Canaan belonged to the
Israelites by a grant from God,
the possessor of heaven and
earth, it was proper that the
first city which resisted them
should be taken in such a manner
as to demonstrate the truth of
their title. And therefore God
did not order them to attack
Jericho with engines of war, but
he ordered the priests, his
immediate ministers, to carry
the ark, containing the tables
of his covenant, round the city
daily for seven days, Joshua
6:13; and to sound trumpets of
rams’ horns, as summoning the
inhabitants in the name of the
God of Israel to surrender; the
armed men going before, and the
rearward following. And on the
seventh day, having surrounded
Jericho seven times, they raised
a great shout, upon which the
wall fell down flat, so that the
people went up into the city
every man straight before him,
Hebrews 11:20. Thus were the
inhabitants of Jericho and all
the Canaanites made to know the
supremacy and power of the God
of Israel, and how vain it was
to make any resistance.” —
Macknight.
Verse 31
Hebrews 11:31. By faith —
Expressed in her words, recorded
Joshua 2:9-11, I know that the
Lord hath given you the land,
&c.; the harlot Rahab — That is,
who had once been a harlot; but
after she believed in the true
God, it is reasonable to think
she amended her manners, as well
as repented of the lie by which
she deceived the king of
Jericho’s messengers. For that
faith in the true God, which
made her hazard her life in
receiving and concealing the
spies, must, when she attained
to more knowledge, have wrought
in her a thorough reformation;
perished not with them that
believed not — With the rest of
the Canaanites in that city,
among whom she dwelt; when she
had received the spies —
Hospitably, and dismissed them
in peace, when an alarm was
taken by her fellow-citizens,
and they searched for them to
destroy them.
Verse 32
Hebrews 11:32. And what shall I
more say — On this copious, this
inexhaustible subject? For the
time would fail me — If I should
attempt to discourse at large;
of Gideon — Who with a small
band of men cut off so many
thousands of the Midianites; and
Barak — Who, through faith in
the prophecy of Deborah, freed
Israel from the oppression of
Jabin, and routed Sisera his
general; and Samson — Who,
through faith in the power of
God, slew so many thousands of
the Philistines with the
jaw-bone of an ass, and
performed many other astonishing
achievements; and of Jephthae —
Who, through believing God’s
promise to Abraham, that his
posterity should possess the
land of Canaan, (see 11:24,) and
through obeying the divine
impulse, which moved him to
fight against the Ammonites,
obtained a great victory over
these enemies of God’s people.
Of David also — Whose faith was
manifested, as in his many other
heroic acts, so especially in
his combat with Goliath: and
even of Samuel — Who, though a
prophet and a judge, yet led on
the armies of the Lord on a
remarkable occasion, to an
illustrious victory: and of the
prophets — After Samuel, the
prophets are properly mentioned:
David also was a prophet, but he
was a king too. By the prophets
he especially intended Elijah,
Elisha, Isaiah, &c., including
likewise the believers who lived
in their days.
Verse 33-34
Hebrews 11:33-34. Who through
faith subdued kingdoms — As
Joshua, the Judges, David, and
others; wrought righteousness —
Lived righteous and holy lives,
and administered justice
impartially, 1 Samuel 12:3-5.
Obtained promises — Namely, of
particular mercies, as Sarah,
Hannah, Manoah, and the prophets
in general, both for themselves,
and to deliver to others;
stopped the mouths of lions — By
their faith prevailed with God
to do it, as Daniel, Daniel 6:22
: quenched the violence of fire
— As Shadrach, Meshach, and
Abednego, Daniel 3. He does not
say they quenched fire, which
may be done by natural means,
but they took off, restrained
the violence, the power of fire
with respect to themselves. The
fire continued still, and
retained its burning power, for
it slew the men that cast them
into the furnace. But by faith
they disarmed it of its power to
hurt themselves, so that not one
hair of their heads was singed.
To these examples, whence the
nature of faith clearly appears,
those more ancient ones are
subjoined, (by a transposition
and in an inverted order,) which
receive light from these.
Jephthae escaped the edge of the
sword; Samson out of weakness
was made strong; Barak became
valiant in fight; Gideon put to
flight the armies of the aliens.
Faith animates to the most
heroic enterprises, both civil
and military. Faith overcomes
all impediments, effects the
greatest things, attains to the
very best, and inverts, by its
miraculous power, the very
course of nature. One thing,
however, is necessary to be
observed by the reader, namely,
that these celebrated worthies
are not represented by the
apostle as being justified by
their faith, but only as
performing miracles, and heroic,
valiant actions by it: nor are
they all commended for their
good conduct in general; for
several of them failed in their
duty in divers instances,
through the want of an abiding
principle of faith and holiness
in their hearts, even as the
Israelites in general, who by
faith had passed through the Red
sea, lost their faith, rebelled,
and were doomed to die in the
wilderness.
Verse 35-36
Hebrews 11:35-36. Women,
naturally weak, received their
dead children raised to life
again — Compare 1 Kings
17:22-23; 2 Kings 4:36-37; and
others — Particularly seven
children and one pious and holy
mother; were tortured — In the
most inhuman manner, to compel
them to renounce their religion,
and be guilty of idolatry. See
the margin. Thus from those who
acted great things the apostle
rises higher, even to those who
showed the power of faith by
suffering; not accepting
deliverance — When it was
offered them on sinful terms,
nor even riches and preferments
added to the proposal; that they
might obtain a better
resurrection — A resurrection to
a better life than that they
were to lose, and a higher
reward than they could have
received had they not endured
these afflictions; seeing the
greater their sufferings, the
greater would be their felicity
and glory hereafter; and others
— In the same glorious cause;
had trial of cruel mockings — As
Samson before Dagon, when the
Philistines had put out his
eyes; and doubtless hundreds of
others, whose names and trials
have not been recorded; and
scourgings — Jeremiah was beaten
by Pashur, Jeremiah 20:2; and by
the princes, Jeremiah 37:15 :
but scourging was so frequent a
punishment, both alone and
before a capital execution, that
it is probable it was inflicted
on many pious persons; moreover,
of bonds and imprisonments —
Joseph was cast into a prison,
Jeremiah was let down into a
dungeon full of mire, Jeremiah
37:13; Jeremiah 37:16; Jeremiah
38:6; and Micaiah was imprisoned
by Ahab, 1 Kings 22:27.
Verse 37-38
Hebrews 11:37-38. They were
stoned — As Zechariah, the son
of Jehoiada, 2 Chronicles 24:21.
See also Matthew 23:31; they
were sawn asunder — As,
according to the tradition of
the Jews, Isaiah was by
Manasseh; were tempted — With
offers of deliverance; but
remaining steadfast, were then
slain with the sword — As also
were 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. Or, as
επειρασθησαν may be rendered,
they were tried, and that in
every possible way; by
threatenings, reproaches,
tortures, the variety of which
cannot be expressed: and again
by promises and allurements.
They wandered about in
sheepskins and goat-skins —
Their outward condition was
poor, mean, and contemptible;
their clothing being no better
than the unwrought skins of
sheep and goats. Nothing is here
intimated of their choosing mean
clothing, as a testimony of
mortification, but they were
compelled by necessity to use
such as they could find or
obtain. Thus have the saints of
God, in sundry seasons, been
reduced to the utmost
extremities of poverty and want.
But there is such a satisfaction
in the exercise of faith and
obedience, and such internal
consolation attending a state of
suffering for the sake of truth
and godliness, as quite
overbalance all the outward
evils that can be undergone for
the profession of them: and
there is a future state of
eternal rewards and punishments,
which will set all things right,
to the glory of divine justice,
and the everlasting honour of
the sufferers. Being destitute —
That is, as Dr. Owen interprets
it, of friends, and of all means
of relief from them; afflicted —
Various ways; the former word
declares what was absent, what
they had not as to outward
supplies and comforts; this
declares what was present with
them, the various evils and
positive sufferings inflicted on
them; tormented — κακουχουμενοι,
malè habiti, or malè vexati,
badly treated; that is, in their
wandering condition they met
with bad treatment continually,
all sorts of persons taking
occasion to vex and press them
with various evils. Of whom — Of
whose society, example, prayers,
instructions; the world was not
worthy — It did not deserve so
great a blessing. The world
thinks them not worthy of it, to
live in it, or at least to enjoy
any name or place among the men
of it; but whatever they think,
we know that this testimony of
the apostle is true, and the
world will one day confess it to
be so. The design of the apostle
is to obviate an objection, that
these persons were justly cast
out, as not worthy of the
society of mankind, and this he
does by a contrary assertion,
that the world was not worthy of
them; not worthy to have
converse with them, or of those
mercies and blessings which
accompany this sort of persons,
where they have a quiet
habitation. They wandered in
deserts, &c. — Being driven from
cities, towns, and villages, and
all inhabited places, partly by
law, and partly by force, these
servants of the living God were
compelled to wander in such as
were solitary, wild, and desert,
and to take up with dens and
caves for their shelter. And
instances of the same kind have
been multiplied in the pagan and
antichristian persecutions of
the churches of the New
Testament; but that no
countenance is here given to an
hermetical life, voluntarily
chosen, much less to the
horrible abuse of it under the
papacy, is too evident to need
being here insisted on.
Verse 39
Hebrews 11:39. These all, having
obtained a good report —
΄αρτυρηθεντες, being witnessed
unto, as persons who did or
suffered great things by faith.
The expression does not imply
that all the Israelitish judges,
captains, and other worthies
mentioned in this chapter, as
well as the ancients, were truly
righteous persons, justified by
their faith, and made heirs of
eternal salvation; for the
apostle’s design in this part of
his epistle being to show, by
examples from the Jewish
Scriptures, the influence which
faith in the divine revelations
and promises hath to excite men
to perform those difficult and
dangerous enterprises which he
assigns to them in particular,
the witness which was borne to
some of them means only the
praise which was given to them
in Scripture on account of the
faith which they showed in
performing these particular
great actions. Received not the
promise — The great promised
blessings, namely, Christ the
promised seed, come in the
flesh, as the accomplishment of
all the types and shadows,
whether of the Mosaic or the
patriarchal dispensation. They
received the promise that the
Messiah should come, as is said
of Abraham, (Hebrews 11:17,) but
did not receive the
accomplishment of it. This the
apostle positively asserts; but
that the Christians in his days
had received it, as is signified
Hebrews 11:40. “It is therefore
not only untrue and unsafe,” as
Dr. Owen observes, “but contrary
to the fundamental principles of
our religion, the faith of
Christians in all ages, and the
design of the apostle in this
whole epistle, to interpret this
promise, as some do, of any
thing but the coming of Christ
in the flesh, of his
accomplishment of the work of
our redemption, with the
unspeakable privileges and
advantages that the church hath
received thereby. That this
promise was made to the elders
from the beginning of the world,
that it was not actually
accomplished to them, being
necessarily confined to one
season, called the fulness of
time, and that herein lies the
great difference of the two
states of the church, that under
the Old Testament and that under
the New, with the prerogative of
the latter above the former, are
such weighty sacred truths, that
without an acknowledgment of
them no important doctrine,
either of the Old Testament or
of the New, can be rightly
understood. This then was the
state of believers under the Old
Testament; they had the promise
of the exhibition of Christ, the
Son of God, in the flesh, for
the redemption of the church;
this promise they received, saw
afar off, as to its actual
accomplishment, were persuaded
of the truth of it, and embraced
it, Hebrews 11:13. The actual
accomplishment of it they
desired, longed for, and looked
after, (Luke 10:24,) inquiring
diligently into the grace of God
contained therein, 1 Peter
1:11-13. Hereby they enjoyed the
benefits of it, even as we do;
yet they received not its actual
accomplishment in the coming of
Christ, the reason of which the
apostle gives in the next verse.
Verse 40
Hebrews 11:40. God having
provided some better thing for
us — Believers under the gospel,
than any bestowed upon them,
which better thing is Christ
himself manifest in the flesh,
with the various privileges and
blessings of the gospel
dispensation, far exceeding
those of the two dispensations
that preceded it. For, as the
divine last quoted further
observes, “It ought to be put
out of question with all
Christians, that it is the
actual exhibition of the Son of
God in the flesh, the coming of
the promised seed, with his
accomplishment of the work of
redemption, and all the
privileges of the church, in
light, grace, liberty, spiritual
worship, with the boldness of
access to God that ensued
thereon, which is intended. For
were not these the things which
they received not under the Old
Testament? Were not these the
things which were promised from
the beginning; which were
expected, longed for, and
desired by all believers of old,
who yet saw them only afar off,
though through faith they were
saved by virtue of them? And are
not these the things whereby the
church state of the gospel was
perfected; the things alone
wherein our state is better than
theirs? For, as to outward
appearances of things, they had
more glory, costly ceremonies,
and splendour in their worship,
than is appointed in the
Christian Church; and their
worldly prosperity was, for a
long season, very great, much
exceeding any thing that the
Christian Church enjoyed in the
apostle’s days. To deny,
therefore, these to be the
better things that God provided
for us, is to overthrow the
faith of the Old Testament and
the New.” That they without us
should not be made perfect — The
expression without us, is the
same as without the things which
are actually exhibited to us,
the things provided for us, and
our participation of them. They
and we, that is, the believers
under the old dispensations, and
those under the new, though
distributed by divine
appointment into distinct
states, yet, with respect to the
first promise, and the renewal
of it to Abraham, are but one
church, built on the same
foundation, and enlivened by the
same Spirit of grace. Wherefore
until we, that is, Christian
believers, with our privileges
and blessings, were added to the
church, it could not be said to
be made perfect, or to have
attained that perfect state
which God had designed and
prepared for it in the fulness
of times, and which the
believers in those ages foresaw
should be granted to others, but
not to themselves. See 1 Peter
1:11-13. “I cannot but marvel,”
says Dr. Owen, “that so many
have stumbled in the exposition
of these words, and involved
themselves in difficulties of
their own devising; for they are
a plain epitome of the whole
doctrinal part of the epistle;
so as that no intelligent
judicious person can avoid the
sense which the words tender,
unless he divert his mind from
the whole scope and design of
the apostle.” |