Hebrews Lesson 33 November
10, 2005
NKJ Psalm
25:21 Let integrity and uprightness
preserve me, For I wait for You.
We are continuing our study in Hebrews. We are in Hebrews 3. We will touch on Hebrews 3 briefly in order
to get our bearings this evening to make sure that we know where it is that we
are headed, where the writer of Hebrews was headed, and why he is saying what
he is saying. Beginning in Hebrews 3:7,
the writer of Hebrews enters into his second major exhortation and warning
section.
NKJ Hebrews
3:7 Therefore, as the Holy Spirit
says: "Today, if you will hear His voice,
I have made the point several times as we have gone into our
study here that the writer has a didactic section and that didactic section
concludes with an exhortation and warning.
In some of these as we get a little further into the epistle, the
warning section is not identical with the exhortation section. For example in this section the exhortation
and the warning are the same. The
entire section from 3:7 down through the end of chapter 4 is both an
exhortation and a warning. The emphasis
is placed on the quotation that comes out of Psalm 95.
NKJ Hebrews
3:7 Therefore, as the Holy Spirit
says: "Today, if you will hear His voice,
That is a direct quote from Psalm 95:7. Just as the writer of the psalm was
challenging his readers and hearers in Psalm 95 to utilize the example of the
rebellion of the Old Testament believers at Kadesh to be an example to them in
their spiritual life in preparation for the coming of the Messiah, so the
writer of Hebrews picks this up and by using that same word “today” he is
modernizing the application bringing it into his presence. He says, “Today you need to listen.” He is addressing his hearers in the first
century. In the same way it makes the
application more significant for us because the same principle holds true that
is contained within these verses. So he
draws the exhortation.
NKJ Hebrews
3:8 Do not harden your hearts as in
the rebellion, In the day of trial in the wilderness,
That’s the major idea that hangs throughout this
passage. We are not to harden our
hearts. Now we have to come to an
understanding of what that means – to harden your heart. That is part of why I am going to do some
background study this evening so that we can start to pick up a little more of
an appreciation for exactly what is meant by this and what is not meant by
this.
NKJ Hebrews 3:9 Where
your fathers tested Me, tried Me, And saw My works forty years. 10 Therefore
I was angry with that generation, And said, 'They always go astray in their heart,
And they have not known My ways.' 11 So I swore in My wrath, 'They
shall not enter My rest.' " 12 Beware, brethren, lest there be
in any of you an evil heart of unbelief in departing from the living God;
The Lord is speaking.
The quote from Psalm 95:7-11 ends in verse 11. So he is drawing an application in verse
12. So if we follow his line of
thinking he draws a conclusion out of the didactic section.
Therefore understanding the significance of Christ’s role as
the one who sets the precedence for our spiritual life and the one who paid the
penalty for our sins on the cross and then is elevated to the right hand of God
the Father as our high priest and He has suffered being tested, He is able to
aid those who are being tempted back in 2:18.
He is drawing all that he has taught related to the role of Christ in
His present high priestly ministry at the right hand of the Father. He says, “Therefore in light of that don’t
harden your hearts.” Then there is a
quote that refers to the example from the Old Testament. So he will make an application from the Exodus
generation and then he drives the point home in verse 12.
NKJ Hebrews
3:12 Beware, brethren, lest there be
in any of you an evil heart of unbelief in departing from the living God;
The word there for departing is the word apostasy. It is where we get our word apostasy in the
Greek, apostosia. That brings a
lot of questions to a lot of folks’ minds.
There are basically three positions that are taken on these warning
passages. There are three positions.
- This
is referring to these are Old Testament generation as people who thought
they were saved, but they weren’t.
They thought they were saved but they fell into unbelief and apostasy. The fact that they don’t enter into
God’s rest indicates that they weren’t ever saved.
- The Arminian
position is the position that they weren’t ever saved to begin with. That is that the Exodus generation was
not saved. That is why they don’t
enter into the rest. The apostasy
here is considered to be the fact that they are not saved.
- They
are saved but they don’t enter into the rewards and blessings that God had
for them in time in the Old Testament.
That is how we understand the passage in the context of
Hebrews. This is a warning to
genuine believers who are born again, who are redeemed yet they failed to
go forward in their spiritual life and failed to take advantage of all the blessing and privileges that
God has given us. As a result of that
the Old Testament generation didn’t enter into the land. The Old Testament generation didn’t
realize the blessings that God had promised them in terms of entry into
the land. The point of warning for
us is that we are to pay attention that and not fall into unbelief and not
depart from a life of walking by the Spirit in obedience to the Lord and
application of doctrine lest we jeopardize those blessings in time that
God has already established for us
or the blessings in the Millennial Kingdom.
So that is the backdrop.
The problem is that for many of us that we get into conversations with
folks and get into questions with people.
They ask, “What you do with this passage?” Or they will talk about especially Hebrews 6. We will get there. They go to these passages and say, “Well doesn’t that mean that
you can lose your salvation?” So we
have to understand how to answer those questions. Remember that Peter says that we always have to be ready to give
an answer to the hope or the confidence that is in us.
That is for every believer - not just for pastors or
evangelists. We can’t just say that it
is in the Bible. We have to be able to
give an answer, a defense, a logical rational defense based on the Scripture for
why we believe what we believe. If
someone asks, “Why do you believe that a person can’t lose their
salvation? What about people who claim
to be believers or Christians but they are murders or they commit this act or
they commit that act. How can you say
that that person is a Christian?” So
you go to passages like this to help understand God’s grace. God’s grace is never dependent on what we
do, how we act or the sin in our life because the sin is paid for completely by
Christ on the cross.
In order to work our way through this passage and also to
provide background for the rest of chapter 3 and all of chapter 4, in fact this
is going to provide you with the Old Testament background for the next several
chapters. I thought it would be good to
do an review and overview of what happened to Israel at the time of the
Exodus. So we will go through several
points to trace out what happened in the Old Testament.
First of all, Israel was in slavery. After Jacob and the boys moved from Judea in
the land of Canaan down to Egypt at the time of the famine when Joseph was the
vizier or the second in command in Egypt, they were ensconced and protected in
the land of Goshen. The Egyptians hated
the Jews. The Egyptians were some of
the most arrogant, racially proud people in the ancient world. They didn’t want to intermarry with anybody
else. They couldn’t stand to be around
any other races. They thought they were
just hardly a notch removed from deity.
They didn’t want these Semites from up in the land of Canaan coming and
living with them and eating in their restaurants or shopping in their stores or
anything else. So they isolated them in
the land of Goshen. For some 300+ years
the seventy that came down into Egypt with Jacob were increased exponentially
by the Lord in His grace. Within that
period of time and it has been demonstrated mathematically to be possible the
population of the Jews increased from 70 to somewhere between 2 and 3
million. You have to grasp that
number.
What is Houston now?
I think Houston is about 3 ½ million.
So that is a little bit larger than the number of Jews that came out
under the Exodus. That is a huge number
of people. Moses really had his hands
full. You think of all the logistics of
trying to move 2 ½ to 3 million people through the wilderness. Now how do we come up with those
numbers? We come up with those numbers
because a census was taken at the beginning of the book of Numbers that
enumerates all of the adult males over the age of 20 so they know how many will
be in the military. They are getting
ready to go into the land to conquer it.
There is a census taken at the beginning of Numbers. There is a census taken at the end of
Numbers. There are approximately
650,000 males between the ages 20 or over.
If there are 600,000 male and if there is one female for every male that
means you are up to 1.2 million. If
every couple has just one child you are up to 1.8 million. If every couple has two children you are up
to 2 ½ million. So that seems to be a
fairly conservative estimate for the population of the Jews. People question that because of the
horrendous logistics, but remember God was in the business of working miracles
through the desert areas. The
Scriptures make it clear that their shoes didn’t wear out. Their clothes did not wear out. God provided them with food on a daily basis
so that Moses didn’t have to figure out where the closest Safeway or HEB
was. He didn’t have to figure out how to
provide food for people. God miraculously
took care of them on a day to day basis.
When they came out of Egypt, they came out as a result of God’s
discipline on the Egyptians for the way they treated Israel and their refusal
to release them from slavery.
General structure of events at this time
- There
were 10 plagues to deliver or redeem or save (Those words are used in
various passages.) the Jews from slavery in Egypt. Each one of the plagues became
increasingly more horrific for the Egyptians.
- The
final plague was the angel of death.
God said that this would be the final plague. The angel of death would come and pass
over or go through the land and the firstborn of every household would
die. However if someone were to
take a lamb that was without spot or blemish and sacrifice the lamb and
spread the blood on the door posts of the house, then the angel of death
would pass over that house. That
is the origin of the word Passover.
It goes back to the event where the angel of death passed over the
house. So the households where
there were believers trusting God to deliver and save them from that event,
they would take a lamb without spot or blemish and sacrifice it and put
the blood on the sides of the doorposts and across the top and a picture
of how Christ would come as the lamb of God to take away the sin of the
world. If you were to connect the
dots you would have a cross. It is
a type of the cross and it is a picture of how Jesus Christ would come as
the Lamb of God to take away the sin of the world. So anybody who trusts in the lamb at
the Exodus event would not experience death in their household. In the same way anyone who trusts in
Christ as their savior has eternal life and will not die. In the final plague the angel of death
would take the life of the firstborn.
For those who applied the blood of the lamb there was the Passover. This is described in Exodus 10 and
Exodus 11.
- As a
result of that and the loss of his first born, the pharaoh releases the
Jews from slavery. He just about
commands them to leave the land.
So they depart but he has second thoughts and starts to pursue
them. They get their back up against the Red Sea. In the Hebrew it is actually the Reed
Sea so we don’t know its exact location.
It’s not identical what you see on a map when you see the Red
Sea.
- God
led the people by way of the Reed Sea when they had their back up against
the water, no place to go. Then
pharaoh and all of his chariots have them trapped. They were chasing
them. The people panicked and
complained to God. God delivered
them. Throughout this time God is guiding them with a pillar of cloud by
day and of pillar of fire at night.
Think of yourself as a Jew.
I want you to put yourself in their position. What are you are
seeing empirically on almost a daily basis? You are seeing the miracles of God. All through these consecutive plagues
you are seeing God’s judgment on the Egyptians because these plagues are
not affecting the Jews in Goshen.
It is selective. So their
animals are protected. Their
flocks, their herds are protected. Their sons are protected by the blood
of the Lamb. So it’s clear that
God is protecting them. Once they
are released and they are going through the wilderness, there is this
miraculous supernatural guidance that takes place. You could stand there and see the cloud
during the daytime and the fire at night.
- The
Pharaoh pursed them. The people
are complaining to Moses. “Why did
you bring us out here to be destroyed by Pharaoh? He’s going to wipe us out. We are all going to be killed
now.” It shows that despite the
fact that they see these miraculous events on a day to day basis, as soon
as adversity comes, they start complaining groaning and griping to Moses
and to God. They don’t trust
Him. But God rescues them anyway
by parting the Red Sea. So they
escape by God’s miraculous deliverance. Now that must have been an awesome
thing to see. The wind comes and blows
the water back. Instantly the
ground is dry. Now that must have
taken some time to get 2 ½ to 3 million people across the Red Sea and then
to the other side. Then pharaoh’s
army pursued them. God stopped the
wind and the waters came back and wiped out pharaoh’s army. It was a tremendous thing to see. What’s the people’s response? Well,
they were trusting God at this point.
We will come back to that in a minute.
- From
the Red Sea they spent three days in the wilderness of Sur. So they have to move through the
wilderness for three days. They
arrive at a place called Marah which is from the Hebrew word meaning
bitterness. There the waters are
bitter, probably some sort of alkaloid substance that has made the water
bitter. What did the people
do? They start groaning and complaining
again. They put the Lord to the
test. The Lord had Moses throw a
tree into the water to make the water sweet. So Moses takes his tree and throws this tree into the water
and all of a sudden it is drinkable.
There is a lot of water here.
This is not some small well.
This is a huge watering hole where the water has turned
alkaline. Now again this is
described as a test. God is
testing them. These are various
adversities that the people are encountering along the way. Of course the purpose of a test is to
reveal the doctrine that is in their soul. With them it is the lack of doctrine in the soul and their
failure to trust the Lord.
- From
there they go to a place called the 12 Palms. Then they pass from there on to the wilderness called
Sin. That is not sin that you
think of in terms of disobedience to God. That is the short form for Sinai. In modern times we would probably call this the wilderness
of Sinai down there in the Sinai Peninsula. A third time they complain.
They start griping and moaning about the food. “God there just isn’t enough food
here.” So God provides manna in
Exodus 16:2f . Not only that, He
also tells them that in the evening He would bring them quail. In the morning they would have
manna. I like to think that manna
would taste like a good hot Shipley donut. It was fresh every morning and it was good. People who don’t live in Houston have
no idea what I am talking about.
But if you are a native Houstonian and you ever move away from here
you know what it is like to come back and have a nice Shipley donut. I used to wake up some mornings when I
was in Connecticut and my mouth would water. I couldn’t wait to get back to Houston and have a Shipley
donut. It got kind of boring after
awhile because day in and day out they had the same thing for
breakfast. So once again they
complained.
- As
they continued on their journey to Sinai, they came to the next place called
Rephidim. Now there is another
test related to water. Notice how
many of these tests relate to logistical grace provision – food, water and
daily sustenance. The people complained again. We read in the text that they were testing the Lord. Exodus 17:3 It is at this place that two names crop up that are
important for understanding the long range history of Israel because they
always go back to this event. This
place is called Massah and Meribah.
Massah comes from the Hebrew word that means despair. The LXX translates it with the Greek
word peirasmos. It is the
Greek word for testing or temptation.
It is a place of testing.
God is testing them with the fact that there is no water. Another word that is used to describe
this place is Meribah. Meribah
means a place of strife or contention.
The LXX translated this with the Greek word loidoresis a
place of reproach abuse or reviling.
So Massah indicates the fact that God is testing them and Meribah
reveals their response. They were
complaining and griping and contending with God over the fact that they
didn’t have any water. God at that
point directs Moses in Exodus 17:3 to strike the rock in order to get
water. He is to strike the rock in
order to get water. He is to take
his staff and to hit the rock to get water. The text simply says that he did it. He took the staff and he struck the
rock and out came water. Now this
must have been a pretty significant flow of water. This isn’t like going out in the back
yard and turning on your garden hose.
A garden hose wouldn’t do a lot for 2 ½ million people. This is a significant flow of
water. There is a river coming out
this rock that is going to flow out into the desert. It would provide enough sustenance for all
the people. This is a major miracle. Think about what the Jews have
seen. You are one of these 2 ½
million people and you are going through the desert and you have already
seen the ten plagues in Egypt. You
have had your back up against the Red Sea. You have seen God deliver you miraculously at the Red
Sea. You have seen the daily
provision of manna every morning and the quail every night. You have seen God turn the water that
was bitter into water that is now pure.
Now you have come to Massah and Meribah and God is going to provide
water out of a rock. Day after day
almost, they are experiencing God’s gracious provision in phenomenal ways. Yet they continue to complain.
- After
they leave Meribah and they are on their way to Sinai, they have a
problem. They immediately run into
one of the most hostile groups of people in the ancient world. This is a marauding band of terrorists.
The size of the Amalekite hoards was quite large – several hundred
thousand. Ancient records indicate
that they migrated across the northern part of what we call Saudi Arabia
today. They were moving in the
direction of Egypt. Some people
think that these are the Hyksos that eventually after this battle move on
into Egypt and wipe out what is left of pharaoh’s army. It has already been decimated. The Egyptians were in a state of
extreme weakness after losing their crack troops in the Red Sea. That’s another story. The Amalekites are constantly a problem
for Israel up until David finally defeats them. Saul almost wipes them out in I Samuel 16 but he doesn’t do
a full job. For that he is
punished. That is the episode (I
just love it.) that Samuel lops the king’s head off. The Bible is so vivid. I just love these images. People today in political correctness
wouldn’t put any of this fun stuff in the Bible. So God gives them this great victory. This is the place where God tells Moses
that as long as he raises his arms the Jews will have victory. But if he drops his arms then they will
lose. So Aaron stands on one side
and Hxxx stands on the other side they prop his arms up. He would hold his arms up for awhile
and the Jews would win. It is
almost like a football game. Things are going this way and then his arms
get tired. Then the Amalekites are
winning and he picks them up and it goes the other way. Finally they prop him up so the Jews
have victory. It is another
picture of God’s miraculous deliverance.
Here is one of the worst most evil most vicious experienced
military forces in the ancient world that come across a bunch of ex-slaves
that couldn’t fight their way out of a paper bag. No military training and very little
organization yet they are defeated because the battle is the Lord’s and
the Lord gives them victory. The
picture that I want you to see is that there is adversity after adversity
and what happens? God provides the
solution. What do they do every
time they face the adversity? They
gripe and complain. I know that it doesn’t remind you of anybody that you
know, but every now and then it reminds me of a few people that I
know. Remember it is only a
test. It’s only a test.
- Then
after defeating the Amalekites they come to Sinai. That is where they hear the voice of
God delivering the law. If they
would have had one of those Olympus digital recorders like I have in my briefcase,
they could have plugged it into their laptop and recorded the voice of God
in MP3 and preserved it for posterity. This isn’t something that they are
hearing in their heads. It is no
some subjective experience that in their morning devotions. God spoke to them in their heart. That’s not what is going on here. They hear the voice of God. It scares them to death. They are so fearful that they tell
Moses that they can’t handle this.
They tell Moses to go up the mountain to get the rest of the law
because they were scared to death to even hear the sound of God’s
voice. So there is empirical
evidence of God’s relationship with them.
While he is up on Sinai they complain again and they fall right
back into carnality. Aren’t they a
lovely bunch? They aren’t any
different from the rest of us.
- They
rebel by having Aaron build the golden calf. They worship the golden calf. God comes down and there is another episode where God
disciplines those who worship the golden calf. That’s in Exodus 32:1-35.
Then they move out from Sinai to Kadesh Barnea and the land that
God graciously promised them because He gave it to Abraham, Isaac, and
Jacob.
- Then
we come to Numbers 11. As they are
approaching the land there is this episode outside the camp where the
people start complaining again.
God punished them with this series that appears to be grass fires
and brush fires that surround the camp.
It seems to threaten them with destruction. So they immediately turn to Moses and
cry out for deliverance. Moses
prays and God stops the burning.
This place is called Taborah.
Numbers 11:1-3. Not much is
said about that particular incidence.
It is another instance where they are complaining about God’s
provision.
- Then
they start complaining about food again.
They complained about food every time they turned around. They wanted to go back. The Egyptians must have had tremendous
cuisine at that time because the Jews wanted to go back and have the tasty
meats, leeks, garlic, and seasonings.
It was sort of like when I
was living in Connecticut I was always wanting Mexican food. You couldn’t get good Mexican food up
in New England. So I was always
complaining that we couldn’t get good Mexican food. Then I would think about this
episode. They would complain about
the food. God graciously supplies
food for them. It was an
overabundance of quail. They all
get sick. In the process Moses
recognizes that there is an administration problem so God gives him
authorization to establish a chain of command to delegate various
responsibilities to various leaders.
The people become ill because of their hunger lust.
- Just
after that Miriam and Aaron lead a little rebellion against Moses. God
zaps Miriam with leprosy. Some
sort of bacteria that starts eating her skin away. She becomes a lovely sight. Almost instantly within a nanosecond
Aaron repents. He confesses and
gets right back with God before it hits him. Once again Moses intercedes and prays. God says He will relent on Miriam but
she must be outside the camp for a week.
It is another instance of the people rebelling against God’s
provision of leadership.
- Then
you come to the major failure which is what took place at Kadesh Barnea.
They are on the southern border of the Promised Land. This is it. This is the big event.
So God tells them to send in spies – one spy from each of the 12
tribes. They were to go on a long
range reconnaissance patrol and find out what the lay of the land was –
not to see if they could take it as I pointed out last time. God said, “I have given this land to
you.” But 10 of them don’t know how to exegete the Word of God and
they don’t know how to interpret it literally. So what they hear is God
telling them to go into the land to see if they can take it. So they come back wining and
complaining and thinking that they can’t do it. There are giants in the land. There are too many people.
Their cities are all fortified. They don’t realize as we learned
later from Rahab that the inhabitants of the land know all about how God
brought them out of Egypt They know all about the Red Sea. They know
everything that has been going on in the wilderness. The people in the land are scared to
death that they are getting ready to get completely wiped out and
destroyed by the God of the Jews.
But the Jews have no trust in God and they wimp out. So God finally swears at that point as
we saw last time that this generation will not enter the land. It is an accumulative effect. There has been disobedience and
complaining and grumbling all the way along. It is not over yet.
- There
are two more failures that occur.
There is the rebellion led by Korah, Nathan and Abiram covered in
chapters 16-22 which God has to discipline greatly. God has to kill several thousand of
people in that rebellion.
- Then
the last rebellion is the sin of Moses and Aaron. Because Moses and Aaron disobeyed God
in the same way that the rest of the nation has, God is going to punish
them the same way. They are going
to be prohibited from going into the land. In this particular incident they do not have water. Moses
goes to God and God says to speak to the rock. Instead of speaking to the rock he comes back to the people
and he gets angry. He speaks out
of anger. That is not what
happened in Exodus. Exodus says
that he was to strike the rock and he struck the rock. Here he gets angry. He accuses the people. That is not what God told him to do. He speaks of himself and Aaron with the
pronoun “we”. He implies that it
might not happen by putting it in a subjunctive case. It casts doubt on
whether God will actually provide the solution. It makes it look like it is up to him – Aaron and himself - rather
than God. The way that he
structures his statement implies that it might not happen. Then he disobeys God. Instead of speaking to the rock, he
strikes the rock. But God in His
grace still provides the water.
There are consequences for his sin and failure. They are prohibited from entering into
the land.
That gives us a framework for understanding the history of
Israel of their movement from the Exodus up to the time of the beginning of the
40 years in the wilderness. That is roughly
what happens in the last two events. That’s
the beginning of 38 more years that they are going to spend wandering in the wilderness
before they are allowed to enter the land.
That’s what provides the back drop for understanding the psalms that is quoted
in Hebrews 3.
Now I pointed out the last time that the rebellion that is
referred to here is that final act of disobedience and disbelief that takes
place at Kadesh Barnea.
The question is in light of all of this failure in light of
all of these years of grumbling and complaining and every time they had an
opportunity to trust God it seems like they failed, were the Jews in the Exodus
generation saved? Are these people saved
and not getting rewards or are they unsaved?
That is the real issue that comes up.
It is a major issue in this whole debate between people who hold to free
grace which is our position. That is the
current theological terminology for what we believe – that salvation is by
faith alone in Christ alone. It’s not
enhanced by good works in the beginning.
It’s not necessarily demonstrated by good works on the back side. That is how lordship salvation seduces
people. It says that if you are really saved then you will produce works that
are in keeping with your salvation. But
all that does is introduce works into the back door. It is a back door works oriented system. It’s not really faith
alone. If it is real faith, you have to
have works accompanying it on the backside.
That’s not grace. That is work
oriented salvation.
So now we have to answer the question that I raised in the
beginning. How do we know that the Exodus generation was a generation of mostly
believers? How do we know that? They
don’t act like believers like most people do.
That’s what you will hear. Did
you hear what so and so did? How can he
be a Christian? They may not have any
theological training or understanding but what they have just articulated is
the lordship salvation position. How
can that person be saved? Look at what
they did? They lied. They had an affair. They performed some criminal activity. They’re homosexual. How can they be a believer? Very easily. They trust in Christ as their savior. Christ died for all those sins just like He died for all of your
sins. Some people don’t have overt sins
that are socially unacceptable. They
get away from their self righteousness but not before God. So how do we know that the Exodus generation
was a generation of mostly believers?
First of all, we have to understand what salvation was based
upon in the Old Testament. In the Old
Testament salvation was based upon faith alone in Christ alone just as it is
based on faith alone in Christ alone today.
Today though, we look back on a historically accomplished salvation that
took place on the cross in approximately 33 AD. Jesus Christ died on the cross.
He paid the penalty as a substitute for our sins so that salvation is by
faith alone in Christ alone. But what
about all those people who lived before Christ? Some people think that they were saved by obeying the law. Some people think that is why God gave the
law.
I remember when I was just a young pastor in my first church
I made the point that the Ten Commandments had nothing to do with today and I
thought half the church was going to take me out and crucify me. I thought everybody understood that. I
didn’t realize how poorly most Christians are taught in relation to the Ten
Commandments. If we just look at the
events that have gone over in Israel’s history from a perspective related to
salvation, it is in the Exodus event that they are delivered from slavery that
they are given the law. It is only
after they are delivered from slavery that they are given the law. The deliverance from slavery, as we will see
in a minute, is a picture of redemption from the nation. They are only given the law and the Ten
Commandments after they are “saved” as a nation.
The Ten Commandments weren’t given to them in slavery but
for their life style after being delivered from slavery. So in the Old Testament salvation was a
matter of faith alone in the future promise of a deliverer. Remember that we say faith alone in Christ
alone. Christ is the anglicized form of
the Greek word christos, meaning the anointed one. Christos in the Greek is the
translation of the Old Testament word mishyak which we anglicize as
Messiah.
- So
their salvation was based on the anticipation of deliverance of the
Messiah - that God would provide a
deliverer, a prophet like Moses but greater than Moses. It was through that deliverer that they
would be saved. It is still faith
alone in Christ alone. It is just that they are looking forward to
salvation and we are looking backward to salvation. But the object of
faith is still the same. It is always the object of faith that has the
power. It is not the faith itself that
has power. It is the object of
faith that has power. It is the
promise of God that you believe.
It is the work of Christ that you believe. It is the object of faith that has the
power. The Mosaic Law was never
given to provide justification. Justification is Paul’s favorite word to
describe salvation. It was never
used that way. A couple of verses
that you can latch on to to focus your thinking. Galatians 2:16 begins with a causal adverbial participle. It
should be translated, “Because we know that a man is not justified by the
works of the law.”
NKJ
Galatians 2:16 "knowing that a man is not justified by the
works of the law but by faith in Jesus Christ, even we have believed in Christ
Jesus, that we might be justified by faith in Christ and not by the works of
the law; for by the works of the law no flesh shall be justified.
A man could never be justified by
the works of the law. It would be impossible is what Paul is saying. It is the object of faith that is
important. It is what Christ did on the
cross. It is not expressing doubt on
Paul’s part. It is expressing the
potential result of the faith that we have believed than we might be. There is a certainty there. To believe is to be justified by faith in
Christ. Can he make it any clearer? Three times in there he says that the works
of the law can’t justify. No matter
how good we are not matter how obedient we are it doesn’t cut any ice with
God. The issue is do we possess the
same righteousness that God possesses.
That means absolute perfection not the tiniest flaw. This is clear in Philippians 3:8-9.
NKJ
Philippians 3:8 Yet indeed I also count all things loss for the
excellence of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord, for whom I have suffered
the loss of all things, and count them as rubbish, that I may gain Christ 9
and be found in Him, not having my own righteousness, which is from the
law, but that which is through faith in Christ, the righteousness which
is from God by faith;
In the previous context he
described all the things that he achieved as a Pharisee. He was born into Judaism in the tribe of
Benjamin. He has gone through the most
excellent training of the Pharisees. He is a Pharisee of the Pharisees. No one had a reputation that surpassed
Paul’s. No one had a mind that was
sharper than Paul’s. No one understood
the law better than Paul. He counted
everything he did on his own as lost.
That’s not rubbish. That is an
anemic word in the English for what the Greek says. Horse manure is a polite way to put it. It counts everything as dung.
All those good works, all that morality and all that religious ritualism
is nothing but dung compared to what Christ gives us. Phil 3:9 It is not what
we do. At the instant of salvation God
gives you Christ’s righteousness.
That’s why He justifies you. It
is justification by faith alone.
Because you trust in Christ God imputes to you Christ’s righteousness
and declares you just because you possess the righteousness of Christ. Were these Old Testament believers coming
out of Egypt justified? Let’s look at
what the Old Testament says.
- When
the people first heard Aaron they believed and they bowed low and they
worshipped. We see this in Exodus 4:30-1. That’s really a summation at the
end of the chapter. This is when
Aaron and Moses first come to the people.
Aaron is Moses’ mouthpiece.
Moses describes how God called Moses to be their deliverer. Aaron spoke.
NKJ Exodus 4:30
And Aaron spoke all the words which the LORD had spoken to Moses. Then he did
the signs in the sight of the people.
NKJ Exodus 4:30
And Aaron spoke all the words which the LORD had spoken to Moses. Then he did
the signs in the sight of the people.
So once again
there is empirical data supporting his position, his contention that Moses is
going to be the deliverer. How do the
people respond? The people
believed. This is something
interesting. We touched on this a
little bit Tuesday night when we saw the faithful servant of Abraham go back to
the homeland to find a bride for Isaac.
Every time God answered a prayer he bowed his head and worshipped. He prostrated himself literally. The word means to worship. It is the idea of expressing gratitude to
God for His provision. That attitude
where we express thanks to God when He provides for us and answers our prayers
is worship. That’s worship. We get such crazy ideas today that worship
is singing a bunch of songs that make you feel a certain way and make you emote
a certain way. But you don’t find that
in the Scriptures. It has to do with
orientation to God and His grace and humility and expressing what God has provided
for us. The people here believed God.
The word that is translated believe is a word that’s familiar to us. It is the Hebrew word aman. We relate it even in our language today as
the word amen. It has a cognate in
almost every language in the world by the way.
I think it is evidence that an early form of Hebrew was probably the original
language spoken in the garden and through ancient history before the Tower of
Babel. It’s a hiphel imperfect. It means to trust, to believe, to rely upon
something. It’s used throughout the Old
Testament to express a condition of salvation.
In fact in Genesis 15:6 we are reminded that Abraham had already
believed God and it was imputed to him as righteousness. That’s the Old Testament foundation for the
doctrine of justification. It is the
same principle that we saw Paul describing in Galatians 2:16 and in Philippians
3:8-9. That is that when we trust
Christ whether it was in anticipation as in the Old Testament or looking back
in the New Testament, when we trust Christ God imputes or reckons to us His
righteousness and declares us to be righteous.
This is the same terminology that is used in Genesis 15:6. In fact six times the word aman
occurs in Exodus 4. At the beginning of
the chapter, Moses doubts the people would believe him. But by the end of the chapter they do
believe him. They believe and that is
indicative of their salvation.
- Their
belief is followed by worship and obedience. This indicates that they are trusting the message of
God. That’s the foundation for
salvation. You see this in Exodus
4:13 and 12:27.
- Again
they believe at the Reed Sea. This
time you have it connected with the word jesua. Jesua is the Hebrew root word
for the name Jesus. In fact Jesus
in Hebrew is jeshua. Jeshua
is another form of Joshua. This is
only the second time that the word jeshua is used in the Old
Testament. It’s the noun salvation.
The significance is emphasized here by the lack of usage. The conclusion in that event is that
God saved Israel that day. So they
believed God at the Red Sea and He delivers them. He saves them.
- They believed
when they saw the deliverance.
NKJ Exodus 14:31
Thus Israel saw the great work which the LORD had done in Egypt; so the people
feared the LORD, and believed the LORD and His servant Moses.
Now what is interesting about this
phrase is that again you have that same word aman. The New King James
says that they believed the Lord. But
literally in the Hebrew it says that they believed and then there is this
little preposition b. The Hebrew word preposition
for “in” is a single letter b. If you
take that and put it into Greek it is the phrase pisteuo eis. Pisteuo eis is the phrase that John
uses over and over and over again in John to express the condition for
salvation - to believe in the name of Jesus.
So the Old Testament terminology that is used in Exodus is the same
terminology used in the New Testament.
That indicates that the people believed in YHWH. They are indeed saved.
- In the
song of Moses we see that Moses connects this salvation with the words for
redemption and the word for being purchased. He connects these together in
his song of praise given in Exodus 15.
These three ideas of salvation redemption and being purchased are
linked together.
NKJ Exodus 15:2
The LORD is my strength and song, And He has become my salvation; He is
my God, and I will praise Him; My father's God, and I will exalt Him.
NKJ Exodus 15:13
You in Your mercy have led forth The people whom You have redeemed; You have
guided them in Your strength To Your holy habitation.
NKJ Exodus 15:16
Fear and dread will fall on them; By the greatness of Your arm They will be as
still as a stone, Till Your people pass over, O LORD, Till the people pass
over Whom You have purchased.
That is the Hebrew word qanah
that means to buy, purchase or acquire something. Incidentally that is the root word for the name of Cain back in
Genesis 3. Eve called her son Cain
because she had acquired a man from the Lord.
It is a synonym for redemption and purchase. So once again Moses is linking all of this together. The people are redeemed. They are a generation of saved Jews.
- Now the
final comment that locks all of this together comes out of the New
Testament with the writer of Hebrews. This is in Hebrews 11:29
All the way through you are talking about believers. You have Adam. You have Noah. You have Abraham, Sarah, Isaac, and Joseph. They are all believers. Then we get
down to 11:29.
NKJ
Hebrews 11:29 By faith they passed through the Red Sea as by dry land,
whereas the Egyptians, attempting to do so, were drowned.
He puts them in the company of a
whole mass of believers down through the history of the Old Testament. They are understood by the writer of Hebrews
to be a saved generation. They have
passed through the Red Sea by dry land.
Our conclusion is that they are a generation of saved
people. They are believers. But they are a rebellious bunch of
believers. They don’t want to trust God
on a day to day basis. Whenever
adversity hits they complain, they gripe and they do anything but trust
God. So the warning for us is not to be
like the Exodus generation; but when we hit adversity in our life, we are to
trust God and He is going to provide the solution for us. He is always going to handle the
adversity. That’s what provides the
backdrop for understanding the principle in this chapter.
Now we will close in prayer.