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The Perseverance Of Faith

by "Carl" <saints@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > May 20, 2008 at 12:56 PM

Christians have faith in Jesus Christ and are saved. It is joyous and 
wondrous. Danny Hall writes about the perseverance of faith.

May God bless,
Carl
website -- http://www.nettally.com/saints/
blog -- http://www.anniemayhem.com/cgi-bin/wordpress/

---

THE PERSEVERANCE OF FAITH
by Danny Hall

April 13, 1986 marked the crowning achievement of my (rather mediocre) 
athletic life. On that day I ran the Vienna Marathon in Vienna, Austria, 
along with a number of others from my office. This marathon provided a 
metaphor for much of the rest of my life, including my spiritual life, 
because life is like a marathon. We live out life not in a brief moment
like 
a sprint, but over a long period of time. As we look into God's word to 
finish this series of messages, I'm going to refer to the marathon from
time 
to time to illustrate how God is preparing us and encouraging us to live
out 
our faith over the long haul.

The final occurrence of the statement "The just shall live by faith" is in

the book of Hebrews. Hebrews is in effect a ****trait of Jesus Christ. It 
exalts him as few other Scripture texts do in explaining to us how he is 
indeed greater than everything else as our Lord and Savior. In 1:1-10:18
the 
author shows him to be superior to the prophets as God's final revelation
to 
us; superior to the angels; superior to the old covenant of Moses; and 
superior to the old sacrificial system, since he died once and for all for

our sins.

In 10:19-25 the author encourages us to draw near to God because of our 
deliverance from our sin, to hold fast to the confession of our hope, and
to 
be about stimulating one to another to love and good works.

In 10:26-31 he gives us another of several warnings that punctuate the
book: 
to not forsake this glorious gospel and great truth. These warnings remind

those who have heard the gospel and have even become involved in the 
community of faith, but have not yet fully submitted themselves to the 
gospel, that they are in danger of turning their backs on the gospel, of 
falling away from all that glorious truth, of trampling underfoot the 
wonderful sacrifice of God. The author warns them to stand firm.

Now in the paragraph we are going to examine, 10:32-39, there is an 
im****tant transition to the subject of God's call to endure to the end.

But remember the former days, when, after being enlightened, you endured a

great conflict of sufferings, partly, by being made a public spectacle 
through reproaches and tribulations, and partly by becoming sharers with 
those who were so treated. For you showed sympathy to the prisoners, and 
accepted joyfully the seizure of your property, knowing that you have for 
yourselves a better possession and an abiding one. Therefore, do not throw

away your confidence, which has a great reward. For you have need of 
endurance, so that when you have done the will of God, you may receive
what 
was promised.

"For yet in a very little while,
He who is coming will come, and will not delay.
But My righteous one shall live by faith;
And if he shrinks back, My soul has no pleasure in him."

But we are not of those who shrink back to destruction, but of those who 
have faith to the preserving of the soul.

The key point of this paragraph is given in verses 35-36: "Therefore, do
not 
throw away your confidence, which has a great reward. For you have need of

endurance, so that when you have done the will of God, you may receive
what 
was promised." The word translated here as "confidence" (parrhesia in the 
Greek text) appears over and over again in the book of Hebrews. Sometimes
it's 
used specifically, as in drawing boldly (this is the same word, parrhesia)

into the presence of God because of what Christ has done (see 4:16; 
10:19-22). But here it's used in a broader sense that is almost synonymous

with faith. It is a boldness, a faith we have in God to go forward. It is 
trusting him completely.

"Don't give that up!" the author says. "You need to endure." All of us
face 
struggles in our Christian life. No one ever said the Christian life was 
going to be easy. It's impossible! We are going to have questions we
cannot 
answer and difficulties that seem insurmountable. One of the shortcomings
in 
so much modern preaching is that you're told if you come to Christ,
somehow 
everything is going to be wonderful. You will cease having problems, 
everything will be straightened out, and you'll be healthy, wealthy, and 
blessed. Now of course, when we come to faith in Christ and are rightly 
related to him, our lives are enriched beyond measure in many wonderful
and 
beautiful ways. But the truth is that we also live our faith in a world 
filled with difficult situations. How do we meet those challenges, endure,

and keep hold of our confidence?

The author points to three things that will help us endure to the end. One

is given in the first part of our paragraph, one in the last part, and one

by implication in the surrounding context. Let's examine them.

First, he calls on us to remember God's gracious provision for our
endurance 
in the past.

Remember God's provision in past suffering

"But remember the former days.." The author is saying, "You've already
gone 
through difficult times and you've made it this far." Focusing on what God

has already done reminds us that we can trust him for the future.

I found a parallel to this in my experience with the Vienna Marathon. 
Running the marathon on April 13th necessitated training for it during the

winter, which was difficult. One day of training sticks in my mind. I was
I 
Kraków, Poland with a colleague, and the temperature outside was 10
degrees 
Fahrenheit, but the wind chill factor was subzero. There was a foot of
snow 
on the ground. This colleague had originally intended to run the marathon 
with me, but had become injured and had to quit training. He was lying on 
the bed in a warm hotel room, wearing his long johns, reading a book, and 
laughing at me while I laced up my shoes to go run in that cold, bitter 
wind. I did the 12-mile run my training schedule called for that day in 
those miserable conditions.

There were times when running the actual race got difficult as well. At
the 
beginning I could easily run way faster than I needed to in all the 
excitement, and toward the end I got energized by the excitement of 
fini****ng. But all that distance in the middle was hard. At about the 25th

kilometer (of 42 total), I started having excruciating pain in my right 
knee. I wondered how I was going to make it to the end of the race. In the

process of handling that, one of the things that happened was that I began

to remember all my preparation, all the things I had already accomplished
up 
to that point. I found I had built up mental strength as well as physical 
strength, knowing what I had accomplished. I was able to draw on it when
my 
knee was killing me.

In the same way, in our spiritual lives we've already come a long way, the

author says. "Remember the former days when things were really tough? You 
were being persecuted and challenged, yet you were able to make it to this

point through God's grace." That is one of the ways we are able to endure.

How do we mentally prepare for difficult times? Notice the kind of people
we 
have to be in order to have past experience to draw on. "After being 
enlightened, you endured a great conflict of sufferings, partly, by being 
made a public spectacle through reproaches and tribulations, and partly by

becoming sharers with those who were so treated. For you showed sympathy
to 
the prisoners, and accepted joyfully the seizure of your property, knowing

that you have for yourselves a better possession and an abiding one."

These people were characterized by two things. The first was a willingness

to suffer for their faith. They had lived out their faith in the face of 
opposition. They had been persecuted and challenged. Second, they were 
willing to identify with others who were suffering. At the height of the 
persecution of the church in the first years of its existence, some were 
being imprisoned for their faith. Prisoners were sometimes starving and
very 
cold. There are beautiful stories of other believers who went and
ministered 
to them. They took food and clothing to them, risking their own safety by 
being identified with those who were incarcerated for their faith. The 
author of Hebrews champions them: "You've been wonderful in that way! You 
were willing to give your all for Christ!"

When you and I adopt the mentality in life that Christ is everything to us

and we're willing to live our lives totally and sacrificially committed to

him, regardless of what we face--whether it's persecution, seizure of our 
property, or loss of other things that are precious to us--God graciously 
sustains us. Then we build up a legacy of God's faithfulness that we can 
draw on later.

I've grown fond of the book Finding God at Harvard. It's a collection of 
personal testimonies by men and women who attended Harvard and Radcliff
over 
the years. They speak of their faith in Christ and what that has meant. In

the epilogue to that book Kelly Monroe, the general editor and founder of 
the Veritas Forum, writes these words:

"The following year, we worked with World Relief in El Salvador, helping
to 
redeem the condition of eight thousand people living in the city dump. 
Writer Peter Clark introduced us to a man who forgave his torturers and 
visited them in prison. As I relayed this story to Becky Baer [another 
friend], she told me about her South African friend who threw himself
around 
a boy who was about to be burned, "necklaced" [a burning tire placed
around 
the neck], for being an informer. He knew it was a gamble, because they 
might have killed them both. 'As Christians we have many freedoms,' says 
Becky, 'one of which is the freedom to die because of the hope we have in 
the resurrection from the dead.' This life has no hold on us, so we are 
beginning to live it with courage." (1)

Once we are able to completely yield ourselves to Christ, we are free in 
ways that no one else can understand to give ourselves completely to his 
glory and live courageously for him. These people were not absorbed with 
worldly things, not even their own safety. They were motivated by eternal 
values. Paul says in Romans 8:18 that there is no suffering in this world 
that can compare to the glory that Christ has for us. We too must become
men 
and women who have values of eternity, who are not tied down by the things

of this world. While God may bless us with all kinds of wonderful things
to 
enjoy, we must hold on to them lightly, because to live for God's glory 
allows us then to experience his gracious help in times of trouble, and on

that we build a legacy of God's faithfulness.

One of the many lessons I learned while working and traveling in Eastern 
Europe was what it meant for people to love God so much that the things of

this earth meant little to them. Most of my friends in Eastern Europe then

were rather poor. They didn't have anywhere near the resources I had even 
living as a missionary. God gave our team wonderful op****tunities to meet 
some very gracious people. We would go into their homes and they would 
prepare a meal for us, and I knew they were putting food before us that
was 
way more than they could afford, and perhaps even the only piece of meat 
they would enjoy for the whole month! I was so humbled by their gracious 
love and hospitality.

One such occasion occurred on my son Christopher's third birthday. Ginger 
and Christopher and a young woman who was working in our office were 
accompanying me to Poland. We all celebrated Christopher's birthday in the

morning at a hotel in Warsaw. Then we drove to a small village in southern

Poland where we were to spend a couple of days with some dear friends of 
ours, Czeslaw and Helena Basara. They had two children, Bogus and Dorotka.

We found out that Dorotka had a birthday that day, too. She turned six.
When 
the Basaras found out about Christopher's birthday, they pulled out the
food 
left over from her birthday party and had another party for us.

Their children were always so gracious to Christopher. There was a 
particular little teddy bear that Christopher latched on to. He played
with 
it a lot that day and the next, and when it was time for us to leave, 
Dorotka gave that teddy bear to Christopher because he had enjoyed it so 
much. The young woman who was traveling with us told us later, after
talking 
to Helena, that the teddy bear was the only birthday gift Dorotka had 
received. But she had great joy in turning around and giving it to her 
little friend. These folks held the things of this world loosely because 
their love for God and the love for others that grew out of that were far 
greater.

That's the kind of people who are described here in Hebrews 10. They gave 
themselves so fully to God that they were free to live their lives 
courageously. And as they saw God graciously sup****t them, that legacy of 
God's faithfulness was built up and enriched. That's the first way we are 
able to endure.

The latter part of this paragraph gives us the second way we can endure:
we 
believe in the ultimate victory of God.

Believe in the ultimate victory of God

Notice that the author expresses the idea through Old Testament quotes, 
which include the theme statement of this series. Verses 37-38:

"'For yet in a very little while,
He who is coming will come, and will not delay.
But My righteous one shall live by faith;
And if he shrinks back, My soul has no pleasure in him.'"

These quotes are taken from the Septuagint, the Greek translation of the
Old 
Testament that was available in that day. The first phrase, "For yet in a 
very little while," is a quote from Isaiah 26:20, the context of which is 
similar to Habakkuk, which we studied in the first message of the series 
(Discovery Paper #4671). In both of these texts there is a call to
patiently 
await the day when God will bring his justice to pass.

The rest of the quote comes from Habakkuk itself. "He who is coming will 
come" is a slight change from the Hebrew. Habakkuk says, "It will
certainly 
come," referring to the fulfillment of God's promise to bring judgment on 
the evil nations that had attacked Israel. The author of Hebrews
personifies 
that day of God's justice in the Lord Jesus Christ, who in his second
coming 
will rule as the just Lord and Savior of all. The author renders the 
expression intensely: "He who is coming will come." The duplication of the

idea signifies the surety of that event.

What he is asking us to do is to look forward to the day when God's
justice 
will reign, when Jesus Christ, the risen Lord of the universe, will be 
revealed in all his glory at his coming, and every knee will bow and every

tongue confess him as Lord. That day is sure! As we struggle to endure in 
faith, we are told to lift up our eyes toward that day when he will indeed

set all things right and vindicate his people for having been faithful to 
him throughout their lives.

Then the author says, "But my righteous one shall live by faith." He's 
emphasizing that it's the ones God has called out, his own, who will live
by 
faith, trusting in the assured outcome of God's victory, and keep going.
He 
contrasts these to the ones who would shrink back. The quotation here 
inverts the order of these two ideas from Habakkuk 2:4 to emphasize living

by faith over shrinking back and not really trusting God in his ultimate 
victory. The translation "shrinking back" is from the Septuagint
translation 
of the Old Testament.

What the author is saying is that there is a finish line to all of this, a

day when the suffering will be over and Christ will be crowned before all 
the universe to see, and we march forward toward that great day in faith.

Remembering my marathon again, I thought I was going to have to quit, the 
pain in my knee was so intense. Between the 25- and 30-kilometer points, 
with every step it felt as if someone were sticking a knife into the side
of 
my knee. But I pushed forward, getting closer and closer to that finish 
line. I passed the 30-kilometer point, took a drink at one of the drink 
stations, and tried to find some way to stretch that knee out to relieve
the 
pain. I realized that after the months I'd been preparing for this, I was 
going to somehow finish this race if I had to drag my leg over that finish

line. I don't know if it was the endorphins that kicked in or what, but as
I 
took off again, the pain went away. I kept running and ran the last 10 
kilometers faster than any other part of the race, and the last stretch
the 
fastest I had ever run.

The cool thing about the Vienna Marathon is that it finishes in the 
Heldenplatz, which is right in front of the old Hofburg, the palace where 
the ruling family lived back in time. Heldenplatz literally means Plaza of

the Heroes. The course of the Marathon curls through enormous stone
archways 
and onto the Heldenplatz, and there's the finish line. So as you draw 
closer, you realize you are about to enter into the Plaza of the Heroes,
and 
you're energized to finish the race! You see that finish line!

In Hebrews 12:1-2 the author talks about Jesus as the author and perfecter

of our faith, and says that we are to keep our eyes fixed on him. Jesus is

our finish line. He is the perfecter, the finisher, of our faith. And by 
keeping our eyes on him, by believing absolutely in the ultimate victory
of 
God, we go forward toward that goal, able to keep our confidence and
endure.

A third way for us to keep going is implied by the context of this 
paragraph. Summing up in verse 39, the author says, "But we are not of
those 
who shrink back to destruction, but of those who have faith to the 
preserving of the soul." We are part of the company of the faithful.

The faithful encourage us

This paragraph transitions us into chapter 11, which presents a fuller 
explanation of what faith does in illustrations of life after life after 
life of those who remained faithful to the end. These are stories of men
and 
women of faith throughout the history of the Bible who laid everything on 
the line for God, having only the future outcome of God's glory and
victory 
to trust in. They hadn't yet even tasted what we have now following
Christ's 
death and resurrection. But these wonderful stories of the faithful in 
chapter 11 then lead into the introduction of chapter 12, where the
faithful 
are described for us as a "great cloud of witnesses." We do not have to 
endure this alone. God has placed us in the company of others who are 
faithfully running the race, and now we have this great cloud of witnesses

who faithfully stood for Christ, and their very testimony cries out to us 
and cheers us on.

The last memory I want to share of fini****ng the marathon is about the
crowd 
lining the streets. Some in that crowd I knew personally: Ginger, 
Christopher, who was still three at the time, and some other wives and 
children of friends of mine who were in the race. They were at the
starting 
line, and they hopped on the subway to different points of the race as we 
ran in order to keep cheering us on.

On that particular day it was very cold for April, and I started out
wearing 
gloves, but I got warmed up early in the race and threw them to Ginger at 
one point. But when we crossed one of the bridges over the Danube, there
was 
a howling, freezing, north wind plowing through the river valley. By that 
time not only was I dead tired, with my knee killing me, but now I was 
freezing again and my hands were numb from the cold. But there was our 
little entourage cheering us on again, so I yelled, "I need my gloves!" 
Ginger was having trouble finding them, so one of the other wives pulled
off 
her own gloves and tossed them to me. In the pictures of my fini****ng the 
race, I have a pair of women's red wool gloves on my hands!

It was so encouraging to have others there cheering us on, not only the 
people I knew but the whole Austrian crowd. Europeans have a great way of 
making a high "Woop, woop, woop, woop!" call as you run by instead of 
whistling or cheering.  As I was coming toward the finish line, the street

was lined with hundreds or thousands of people, and every step of the way 
they were yelling, "Woop, woop, woop," and clapping and cheering us on.
And 
the crowd gave me energy!

That's the picture here. We draw strength from the community of the
faithful 
around us, and it spurs us on toward victory.

If we can grab hold of these three things--remembering that God has 
graciously brought us this far, believing in the ultimate victory of God, 
and drawing strength from the community of faith, we can hold on to our 
confidence and endure to the end.

Let's review what we've learned about what it means to live by faith in
this 
series. First, living by faith means that we see things through God's
eyes, 
not through our own narrow perspective. Second, it means we trust God for 
the resources that we need to break the bonds of our own sinfulness and 
provide everything we need for life and godliness. Third, it means we keep

our eyes on the goal, enduring to the end. "Now may the God of peace
Himself 
sanctify you entirely; and may your spirit and soul and body be preserved 
complete, without blame at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ. Faithful
is 
He who calls you, and He also will bring it to pass." (1 Thessalonians 
5:23-24.)

Scripture quotations are taken from New American Standard Bible, ć 1960, 
1962, 1963, 1968, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1995 The Lockman
Foundation. 
Used by permission.

Notes:
(1) Kelly Monroe, Finding God at Harvard, © 1996. Published by Zondervan 
Publi****ng House, Grand Rapids, MI. Pps. 353-354.


Copyright © 2000 Discovery Publi****ng, a ministry of Peninsula Bible
Church. 
This data file is the sole property of Discovery Publi****ng, a ministry of

Peninsula Bible Church. It may be copied only in its entirety for 
circulation freely without charge. All copies of this data file must
contain 
the above copyright notice. This data file may not be copied in part, 
edited, revised, copied for resale or incor****ated in any commercial 
publications, recordings, broadcasts, performances, displays or other 
products offered for sale, without the written permission of Discovery 
Publi****ng. Requests for permission should be made in writing and
addressed 
to Discovery Publi****ng, 3505 Middlefield Rd. Palo Alto, CA. 94306-3695.
 




 2 Posts in Topic:
The Perseverance Of Faith
"Carl" <sain  2008-05-20 12:56:11 
The Perseverance Of Faith
"Carl" <sain  2008-05-22 14:02:46 

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tan13V112 Fri Jul 25 15:26:33 CDT 2008.