Faithful Till the End v2
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Scripture:
Scripture:
Hebrews 6:12 “so that you may not be sluggish, but imitators of those who through faith and patience inherit the promises.”
Recap:
Recap:
Last week we saw that our assurance does not rest on the strength of our faith, but on the strength of God’s promise. In Hebrews 6, the author pointed us back to Abraham to show us that God is a promise-making and promise-keeping God, who swore by His own name because there was none greater. We saw that this promise was not merely about land or descendants, but about Christ Himself—the true offspring of Abraham. And we were reminded that God bound Himself with both a promise and an oath, not because He is untrustworthy, but because we are weak. He desired to give strong encouragement to trembling believers, that we might flee for refuge and hold fast to the hope set before us.
Introduction:
Introduction:
When I was in 8th grade, I loved playing soccer. I loved it because I have always loved being pushed mentally and physically in anything. I loved and have always loved a challenge. One day while the Jv and Varsity Team were practicing, my coach said “Tomorrow at practice we are going to run a two mile run.” This wasn't new for us, in-fact we ran a 5k regularly for some of our practices. But then he said, “And whoever can run the two miles in under 12 minutes, will start varsity, regardless of skill level.” I perked up instantly and my heart began to race because I wanted to get on the field with those guys. But I knew that I couldn't do it, and hadn't come close to that so far in my two mile run. Yet my coaches word was his word, and I knew if I could do it, I would be starting varsity the next game. So I came up with a plan. There were three upper class men who were the fastest best distance runners we had, and I had made up my mind, to stick behind Johnathan Woody, the slowest of the three, no matter what happened. Not to think about anything else but to follow Woody. So the next day we showed up, stretched and started our run, and just like I had made up my mind, I stuck behind Woody. His pace was unheard of and I after the first lap was cooking. The pain was intense but I kept my eyes on him, watched how he ran, calmed my mind, and welcomed the pain. Before I knew it, the run was over. I had ran two miles in 11:45 seconds…
After the run, I collapsed in the grass, my vision was blurry, I started dry heaving, and I felt like I was going to die..But I cant begin to express to you the joy I had felt in my heart after that run. I went on to start varsity, not only the next game, but for the rest of my soccer season. By my senior year, I could run a two mile run in 10:35 seconds, and a mile run in 4:50 seconds. All because something clicked in my brain that day in eighth day that would have never clicked on my own. I had no idea I could push myself like that, until my goal was to keep my eyes on someone who could do it. It was through imitating Woodys pace, stride, posture, and composer in the midst of pain that gave me patience, endurance and the belief that I could do this.
Now Im not recommending anyone do this if you're trying to get into running. Like I said, I was pretty miserable after that run, and very sick. But theres something that I would recommend doing in the spiritual run that we who have faith in Christ are in, and not only me but the apostle of this Letter. His recommendation and desire, is that his listeners become imitators of those who have recieved the promises of God.
Wait why are we going Backwards in the text?
Wait why are we going Backwards in the text?
Well as we saw Last week, Father Abraham was mentioned. And one of the reasons that Abraham was mentioned was because he was and is one of many faithful men and women who have obtained the “promises” of God through death. Last week we saw that in verse fifteen “As thus Abraham having patiently waited, obtained the promise.” And we said “that promise (singular) was the promise of the messiah.” Yet there are in our text “the promises” (plural) which means “all the promises of God to his children”, which can only be recieved in glory, through death. We who are by faith united by Christ, have recieved THE promise of hope, redemption, restored restoration, and the future hope of life everlasting, in THE promised Christ. Another Reason I believe that Abraham is mentioned, is because he has also recieved all the promises of Christ, by dying in Christ, and the author wants to set before us the pace of the believer, the reward of the race, and the reminder that we are not the first ones to run it, nor will we be the last. Thats why the phrase “until the end” in verse 11 is there. Be faithful till the end. Imitate those who have been faithful till the end. Press on to the grave, unwavering in your faith, because as believers, thats when our life begins. And we need to remember that the family of God, is far greater than the visible family we see. Now I wont be preaching the Hall of Faith, but I do believe this verse serves the believers as a teasing of it, in order to encourage them in their pursuit of the full assurance of hope till the end. And although it may not seem like thats what subtly just happened here but it is! Albert Mohler - “ He encourages them to be imitators of those who through faith and perseverance inherit the promises. Throughout the book of hebrews, the writer encourages believers to imitate saints from the old Testament. In chapter 11 which 6:12 anticipates, we find an impressive list of old Testament saints whose faith and practice is worthy of our emulation. The author charges his readers to face their difficulties with faith and perseverance, just as those saints who came before them faced theirs. Only earnestness in the faith until the ends guarantees the reception of God’s promises.”
Purpose of the Text:
Purpose of the Text:
The author urges discouraged believers to persevere by imitating saints who finished the race—especially Abraham—whose faith endured waiting, weakness, and failure.
Purpose of the Sermon:
Purpose of the Sermon:
To set before you the awareness of those who have gone before us, to encourage you brothers and sister to keep going
The Imitation of Godly Saints, helps the struggling Christian in the strengthening of their Faith
Godly Imitation serves true Authentication
Godly Imitation serves true Authentication
You will know them by their fruits
Only Genuine children will “inherit the promises.” And what we learn from those who scripture has told us have inherited the promise, is that they possess genuine Faith and Patience till the end.
Hebrews 6:15 “And thus Abraham, having patiently waited, obtained the promise.”
It is not the behavior we are called to imitate, but the spiritual character.
Abraham is the Example here given to the Hebrews to imitate. And If you know anything about Abraham, he was a sinful man.
Fear of Man by offering his wife to Pharoah to save his own life
Impatience towards God promise by taking hagar as wife
Passive leadership by not wanting anything to do with the justice of hagar being sent away
Fear of man again is offering his wife to Abimelech
In spite of all this, he is most certainly worthy of our imitation because why? “Having patiently waited, (he) obtained the promise.”
He had faith and patience…The most valuable characters traits in the lives of the Christian. These are those who we are to set out to imitate. Ones who have recieved and obtained the promises of God, through trials, sufferings, tested faith, and enduring patience. Proving that he was genuine in what he claimed his pursuit was.
Why? Because theres no doubt that they believed what they claimed they believed in.
A brother shared this week in gospel groups something that I believe many of us as Christians in our walks struggle with. He shared “lately Im struggling with getting the knowledge of God from my head to my heart.” And lest you think this poor brother lost, I ask you examine yourself before God and you will find that you have been there, are there, or will so be back in that position. This is a reality of the majority of Christians who are walking the earth. And God in his Word, and through the living, eternal, universal Church, has given us men and women who have gone before us and obtained the promises of God…They lived lives just like us. Were sinful just like us. Struggled in every way that we do, yet in the end, their faith was made sight!
We need to look to real live examples of Men and Women who have gone before us, so that we may endure till the end.
Hebrews 6:11–12 “And we desire each one of you to show the same earnestness to have the full assurance of hope until the end, so that you may not be sluggish, but imitators of those who through faith and patience inherit the promises.”
Is your walk sluggish? Is it aimless at times? Do you feel like no Christian can relate to your current suffering? Beloved that is not true. And you need only to search in your own Christian family tree to find not a small, but a very massive library of the history of men and women who were just like you, and through Gods tender care and Faithfulness, held their wavering faith till the end. What hope! Godly Imitation is not Impersonation
We want to be genuine don’t we?
The Devil is going to try everything in his power to choke out your faith. He doesn't want one fruit of faith to grow in your life and he will throw at you care after care, pleasure after pleasure, promise after promise, distraction after distraction to ensure that happens. He will stop at nothing to do this.
Godly Imitation Continues Christ's Manifestation
Godly Imitation Continues Christ's Manifestation
The Truth Made Manifest
There was a reality that has always been true, and that is “God loves his children.” Yet because of our fallen nature we struggle to see and believe this. So what did God do? He made this truth, his Word, Manifest to come to earth and display this reality for all of mankind in the most tangible way.
God still works this way, because we as humans are still in need of visible representations of the truths of Scripture.
Paul was a visual representation of the Suffering Servant
Ephesians 2:17 “And he came and preached peace to you who were far off and peace to those who were near.”
Christ never physically came to Ephesus, but was himself the one seen through Pauls preaching.
Colossians 1:24 “Now I rejoice in my sufferings for your sake, and in my flesh I am filling up what is lacking in Christ’s afflictions for the sake of his body, that is, the church,”
John Piper - “he chose to come into the world before there were DVDs or tapes or internet, and appoint people like Paul to fill up what is lacking, namely, to take the sufferings of Christ to the world, to take the afflictions to the world. The afflictions are there for someone but they don’t know it, and he means for them to be completed by being taken somewhere.”
In other words, its one thing to say you love God, but its another thing to see a saint lose everything and still be able to say that. Its one thing to say the there's no way you would abandon Christ, and a totally other worldly thing to see saints actually do that in the face of suffering. They example a supernatural faith and patience that every christian will need in order to finish the race.
We as humans are in need of spiritual realities being made manifest (Visible)
It Runs in the Family
In hebrews we have seen that “Christ is not ashamed to call you brothers.” Why? Because we have the same source. The same Father, the Same Spirit, the Same sanctifier, the Same Family Name.
