This was a great point!
"While many of the stories point to specific actions that were done, it is important to see that their faith produced the action and not the other way around. We don't earn our faith because of good actions; right actions are a result of proper faith. Romans (4) tells us that Abraham was not saved because he obeyed God; rather, his obedience to God was a result of his faith. James 2 teaches that a man (or woman) who has faith in the promises of God will show their faith through their actions.
Also I noticed this one too!
In Hebrews 11 there is a constant reference to the promise that God had given to various people. The initial promise was given in Genesis 3:15. God promised that there would be a Redeemer who would come and save humanity from the punishment of their sin. This promise was originally given to Eve when God said that from her seed the Redeemer, a Savior, would come. Throughout the Bible God gave more and more specifics for who the Redeemer would be and where He would come from.
The promised Redeemer was later defined as coming from the family of Abraham; specifically through the line of Isaac. Later God narrowed the promise through Isaac's son Jacob and then through the house of David. Through Hebrews 11 we can see that God takes a general promise and throughout history narrows down the promise to exactly where the Redeemer would come from.
He mentioned the promised Redeemer, promised Messiah, promised Savior a lot in this study. Our faith should be in the promised One.
Listen to this…..
After all these great stories of faith in verse 39 tells us that these individuals never received the promise in a physical way. That promise was the future birth of the Redeemer Savior and Messiah Jesus Christ. They did not see the day of His coming. However, their faith in that promised Redeemer was counted for their salvation. Their faith was in something they never saw, but that does not mean that their faith was in vain. They believed God for something He promised. (They didn't see, but they believed!)
Though we don't see Jesus Christ walking among us today, we can receive the promise in the same way these Old Testament believers did: through faith. We don't look forward to the future promise of a Redeemer, we look backwards through the written Word of God to see what God has given. AMEN!!!
"While many of the stories point to specific actions that were done, it is important to see that their faith produced the action and not the other way around. We don't earn our faith because of good actions; right actions are a result of proper faith. Romans (4) tells us that Abraham was not saved because he obeyed God; rather, his obedience to God was a result of his faith. James 2 teaches that a man (or woman) who has faith in the promises of God will show their faith through their actions.
Also I noticed this one too!
In Hebrews 11 there is a constant reference to the promise that God had given to various people. The initial promise was given in Genesis 3:15. God promised that there would be a Redeemer who would come and save humanity from the punishment of their sin. This promise was originally given to Eve when God said that from her seed the Redeemer, a Savior, would come. Throughout the Bible God gave more and more specifics for who the Redeemer would be and where He would come from.
The promised Redeemer was later defined as coming from the family of Abraham; specifically through the line of Isaac. Later God narrowed the promise through Isaac's son Jacob and then through the house of David. Through Hebrews 11 we can see that God takes a general promise and throughout history narrows down the promise to exactly where the Redeemer would come from.
He mentioned the promised Redeemer, promised Messiah, promised Savior a lot in this study. Our faith should be in the promised One.
Listen to this…..
After all these great stories of faith in verse 39 tells us that these individuals never received the promise in a physical way. That promise was the future birth of the Redeemer Savior and Messiah Jesus Christ. They did not see the day of His coming. However, their faith in that promised Redeemer was counted for their salvation. Their faith was in something they never saw, but that does not mean that their faith was in vain. They believed God for something He promised. (They didn't see, but they believed!)
Though we don't see Jesus Christ walking among us today, we can receive the promise in the same way these Old Testament believers did: through faith. We don't look forward to the future promise of a Redeemer, we look backwards through the written Word of God to see what God has given. AMEN!!!
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