Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-45l2p Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-25T16:55:48.271Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Faith in the God who Resurrects: The Theocentric Faith of Hebrews

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 December 2016

Matthew C. Easter*
Affiliation:
Missouri Baptist University, One College Park Drive, St. Louis, MO 63141, USA. Email: Matthew.Easter@mobap.edu
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

This article investigates the object of faith in the Epistle to the Hebrews, and argues that the object of faith is God and not Jesus. God is the object of faith in Hebrews because God is the one who holds the power of resurrection, the eschatological hope of both the faithful one par excellence (Jesus) and those who follow him. The author of Hebrews expects his persecuted community to place their faith in God in hope of being raised with Jesus, the resurrected faithful one who also placed his faith in God.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2016 

1. Introduction

The Epistle to the Hebrews provides some of the richest insights into the meaning of faith in the New Testament. Faith does not usually have an object in Hebrews, and I will show below that whenever the author of Hebrews does have an object of faith, that object is God and not Jesus. In this present study, I investigate the question of ‘Why?’ That is, ‘For what reason should a person have faith in God, according to Hebrews?’ I argue that God is the object of faith in Hebrews because God is the one who holds the power of resurrection, the eschatological hope of both the faithful one par excellence (Jesus) and those who follow him. First, I will show that Jesus is not the object of faith in Hebrews. Then, I will work through each passage where there is an object of faith and show how in each case God is that object, and that God as object of faith is connected directly with God's ability to raise the dead.Footnote 1

A number of interpreters see Jesus as the object of human faith in Hebrews.Footnote 2 Hurtado, for instance, writes: ‘One of the most notable expressions of belief in Jesus in earliest Christianity is the writing known as the Epistle to the Hebrews.’Footnote 3 There are three main arguments for seeing Jesus as object of faith in Hebrews, but all three prove unconvincing.

  1. (1) Since faith and obedience are related,Footnote 4 and Hebrews speaks of humans obeying Jesus (Heb 5.9), then this implies faith in Jesus.Footnote 5 However, ‘obedience’ towards someone does not also mean faith in that person. The author of Hebrews tells his hearers to ‘obey your leaders and submit to them’ (Heb 13.17), but it is unlikely that he wishes his hearers to have faith in them.

  2. (2) In Heb 13.8 the author says that Jesus is ‘the same yesterday and today and forever’, and in 13.7, he urges his hearers to imitate the faith of their leaders. Hurst suggests: ‘The more probable link between the two verses is that the latter is an amplification of the nature of the leaders’ faith, a faith which was in Christ and his work; since he is the same “today” as he was then, they may with confidence imitate such faith.’Footnote 6 Hurst's interpretation of Heb 13.7–8 is weakened by three observations. First, the leaders’ faith which the hearers are to imitate is probably connected not with belief (as a faith in Christ), but with faithfulness, ‘the outcome of their way of life’ (13.7). This ‘outcome’ may be their deaths, and so speaks of a faith that endures to death.Footnote 7 Second, the connection between the leaders’ faith in 13.7 and Jesus in 13.8 is not necessarily located in Jesus as the object of faith, but could recall Jesus as the basis of faith. That is, given that Jesus is consistent as the one who ‘is the same yesterday and today and forever’, we have reason for faith.Footnote 8 Third, Hurst misses other connections in the immediate context showing that the issue at hand is not faith in Christ, but the consistency of Jesus. Heb 13.8 may look ahead to the exhortation not to be led away by divergent teachings (13.9). That is, rather than follow diverse and strange teachings, we should remember that Jesus Christ is consistent as one who is ‘the same yesterday and today and forever’.Footnote 9 Furthermore, the leaders’ faith in 13.7 could point back to 13.6, where the author reminds us that ‘we can confidently say, “The Lord is my helper; I will not fear; what can a person do to me?”’ Their faith to the end demonstrates the truth of this scripture quotation. Therefore, Hurst's reading of 13.7–8 ultimately fails to convince.

  3. (3) Others have suggested that Hebrews implies faith in Jesus when describing faith in God.Footnote 10 Rhee, for example, notes that the author of Hebrews thinks of Jesus as God (as in Heb 1.8), and for this reason should be considered the object of faith.Footnote 11 Later, Rhee equates ‘faith toward God’ in 6.1 with ‘faith in Christ’.Footnote 12 Nevertheless, even if we grant Rhee that Jesus being God makes him the object of faith, this does not demonstrate Christ as object of faith, but God as object. Jesus would be object of faith only by virtue of his being God.

Instead of Jesus being the object of faith, the author of Hebrews explicitly or implicitly speaks of God as object of faith (2.13; 3.12, 19; 4.2, 3; 5.7–9; 6.1; 11.6, 11, 19). In each case, as we will see, the faith directed towards God is associated with the hope of resurrection. I will not be addressing every place where there might be the hope of resurrection. Indeed, Hebrews addresses resurrection without clearly implying faith in God (11.35; 13.19–20). I restrict myself to cases where faith in God is present in Hebrews. In each case we will discover that faith in God is motivated by confidence that God holds the power of resurrection.Footnote 13

2. Faith through Suffering (Heb 2.13)

In Heb 2.13, Jesus speaks the words of Isa 8.17: ‘I will put my trust in him (ἐγὼ ἔσομαι πεποιθὼς ἐπ᾿ αὐτῷ).’Footnote 14 DeSilva suggests that Jesus in 2.13 confesses trust not in God, but in human beings, his brothers and sisters.Footnote 15 However, in 2.13 Jesus confesses trust in a singular αὐτῷ. Throughout the context in Heb 2.10–18, the author of Hebrews speaks of human beings in the plural (πολλοὺς υἱούς in 2.10; οἱ ἁγιαζόμενοι and ἀδελφούς in 2.11; ἀδελφοῖς in 2.12; παιδία in 2.14; τούτους in 2.15; ἀδελφοῖς in 2.17; and τοῖς πειραζομένοις in 2.18). God is the only singular figure in the context (αὐτῷ in 2.10; ὅ … ἁγιάζων in 2.11; and σε in 2.12). Therefore, when Jesus confesses trust ἐπ᾿ αὐτῷ in 2.13, this refers to God.

Jesus trusts God, I suggest, because he believes that God can raise him from the dead. Jesus’ confession of trust in Heb 2.13 is one of trust through suffering. Jesus, who for a short time was made lower than the angels, received the crown of glory and honour on account of his suffering of death (2.9). God made Jesus perfect through sufferings (2.10). Jesus became like his human siblings in every way so that ‘through death he might destroy the one who has the power of death’ (2.14), and free humanity from slavery to the fear of death (2.15). Jesus made atonement for the sins of the people (2.17), which clearly implies his death (9.12–15; 10.10, 19; 13.12). Jesus’ trust in 2.13, therefore, is a trust in God in the midst of suffering.

It is within this context of death that the author puts the words of Ps 21.23 LXX on the lips of Jesus: ‘I will announce your name among my brothers and sisters; in the midst of the congregation I will praise you’ (Heb 2.12). Psalm 21 LXX is a plea for help in suffering, in anticipation of deliverance.Footnote 16 The psalmist experiences abandonment (21.2–3) and ill treatment from others (21.7–19). In motifs repeated in the passion traditions in the Gospels, he feels forsaken (Ps 21.2; Matt 27.46; Mark 15.34) as he is poured out like water (Ps 21.15; John 19.34), experiences extreme thirst (Ps 21.16; John 19.28), and others cast lots for his clothing (Ps 21.19; Matt 27.35; Mark 15.24; Luke 23.34; John 19.24). In Ps 21.21–2 (the verses immediately prior to the verse quoted in Hebrews), he begs for deliverance from death: ‘Deliver my soul from the sword, and my only life from the dog's hand. Save me from the lion's mouth, and my humiliation from the unicorns’ horns.’ The psalmist moves from lament to jubilant confidence, with the promise to ‘tell of your name to my kindred’ (21.23) and the exhortation to praise the Lord because he has heard the petition of the poor (21.24–7). As Lane notes, this latter half of the psalm ‘is appropriate to an experience of vindication and exaltation after suffering and affliction’.Footnote 17 Having endured suffering (as noted in the contexts of both Hebrews 2 and Psalm 21, quoted in Heb 2.12), Jesus now rejoices in vindication.Footnote 18 Peter C. Craigie's messianic reading of the ending of Psalm 21 would apply here:

The psalm concludes with praise because the sufferer escaped death; Jesus died. Yet the latter half of the psalm (vv 22–32) may also be read from a messianic perspective. The transition at v 22 is now understood not in deliverance from death, as was the case for the psalmist, but in deliverance through death, achieved in the resurrection. And it is that deliverance which is the ground for praise.Footnote 19

Jesus’ confession of trust in Heb 2.13, therefore, is a faith in the face of suffering that realises reward following the suffering. God, the object of this trust (πεποιθὼς ἐπ᾽ αὐτῷ), is the one with this resurrecting power. By placing his faith in God in the midst of his suffering of death, Jesus demonstrates a trust in the only one who can deliver him, even if he dies.

3. Faith to Enter God's Rest (Hebrews 3.12, 19; 4.2–3)

God is clearly the object of faith in Hebrews 3–4. He is the one whose voice we are to hear (3.7, 15) and into whose rest we are to enter (4.1; 9–11). The need to trust God is evident in light of the Kadesh narrative undergirding these verses (see Ps 95.7–11 quoted in Heb 3.7–11, which refers to Num 14), where the wilderness generation had to trust God to bring them into the Promised Land and so move forward into ‘the rest’. Against this backdrop, when the author warns against an ‘evil, unbelieving heart’ (3.12), this is likely a heart that does not trust God (cf. Num 14.11). Similarly, the wilderness generation failed to enter the rest ‘because of unbelief (δι᾿ ἀπιστίαν)’ (3.19). They were not ‘united in faith (συγκεκερασμένους τῇ πίστει)’ (4.2), but ‘the ones who have trusted (οἱ πιστεύσαντες) enter the rest’ (4.3). They refused to enter the Promised Land because they did not trust God to bring them safely into the land (cf. Num 14.8). In Hebrews 3–4, therefore, God is the object of faith.

Hebrews 3–4 does not directly connect trust in God with God's power to resurrect. However, I suggest that resurrection is prerequisite to entering the rest. If I am correct that this rest can be inhabited only by resurrected humans, and trust in God is a requirement for entering it (4.2–3), then it possible that God's resurrecting power is the basis on which the author of Hebrews urges his hearers to trust God.

The rest is one of many images in Hebrews referring to the eschatological hope. Along with salvation (1.14; 2.10; 5.7, 9; 6.9; 7.25; 9.28), promise (4.1; 9.15; 10.36; 11.13, 39), reward (10.35; 11.6, 26), promised eternal inheritance (9.15) and an enduring homeland to come (2.5; 10.34; 11.10, 14, 16; 12.22, 28; 13.14), it depicts an eschatological hope in the heavenly realm that is reserved for resurrected human beings.

That the rest is in the heavenly realm is indicated by two observations. First, the author exhorts his hearers to enter rest (3.11, 18, 19; 4.1, 3, 5, 6, 10, 11). The metaphor of movement elsewhere in Hebrews is often associated with the divine realm.Footnote 20 Second, the rest is consistently described as God's rest. When Psalm 95 is quoted in Hebrews, the rest is τὴν κατάπαυσίν μου (3.11; 4.3, 5), and elsewhere the rest is τὴν κατάπαυσιν αὐτοῦ (3.18; 4.1, 10). Κατάπαυσις appears without a possessive pronoun twice. In 4.3a, τὴν κατάπαυσιν is clearly the same as τὴν κατάπαυσίν μου in 4.3b. In 4.11, the rest is ἐκείνην τὴν κατάπαυσιν, and ἐκείνην τὴν κατάπαυσιν in 4.11 is pointing back to τὴν κατάπαυσιν αὐτοῦ in 4.10. Israel's eventual entrance into the Promised Land under Joshua was not a full realisation of the rest (4.8) precisely because the land was on earth, and not God's rest in the heavenly presence of God.Footnote 21 The rest, then, is the heavenly presence of God.

This rest in the heavenly realm can be inhabited only by human beings who have received an enduring life by resurrection. God did not subject the coming world (οἰκουμένην τὴν μέλλουσαν) to angels, but to humanity (2.5). He intends for humanity to be crowned with glory and honour (2.7), with all things in subjection to them (2.8). Even though angels appear in the heavenly Jerusalem (12.22), the author makes clear elsewhere that they exercise no dominion (1.13; 2.5) but worship the Son (1.6) and serve the Son and humanity (1.7, 14). The οἰκουμένη in 1.6 is likely the heavenly realm that Jesus entered upon his exaltation. Moffitt has argued convincingly that Jesus must be an embodied human being in order to enter this heavenly realm.Footnote 22 As Moffitt shows, this is made evident in Heb 1.7–9, which contrasts the angels’ spiritual nature with Jesus’ exaltation to the right hand of God. The angels are πνεύματα, God's ministers who are flames of fire (1.7), but the Son possesses God's throne and exercises dominion (1.8). Curiously, the author of Hebrews sees the angels’ spiritual nature (πνεύματα; πυρὸς φλόγα) as a condition excluding them from sitting at the right hand of God. He does not root Jesus’ right to exercise royal dominion in his eternal nature (as described in 1.2–3). Instead, he says that Jesus was anointed beyond his companions (1.9), which suggests that he was one of a number in his human peer-group who could have received such dominion.Footnote 23 God intended glory, honour and dominion for human beings (2.5–9), and from among these companions Jesus was invited to sit at God's right hand. Jesus’ embodied humanity, therefore, qualifies him to enter the heavenly realm.Footnote 24 Since embodied humanity is the necessary qualification to enter the heavenly realm (God's rest), and since embodied humans die, resurrection is a necessary condition for enjoyment of the eschatological hope.

As the author makes clear in Heb 4.3, a person can enter God's rest only by faith in God. God is the one with the power to bring people into God's rest, and therefore the one with the power of resurrection. Therefore, when the author of Hebrews encourages his hearers to trust God in order to enter the rest, he is encouraging them to trust in the one who holds the power of resurrection.

4. Faith in the One Able to Save Out of Death (Heb 5.7–9)

In Heb 5.7–9, Jesus is offering prayers and supplications with loud cries and tears to τὸν δυνάμενον σῴζειν αὐτὸν ἐκ θανάτου, clearly a reference to God. Although the author does not use a πιστ- word to describe Jesus in 5.7–9, he depicts him exercising faith in God even in the face of death. Patrick Gray has argued at length for reading εὐλάβεια as ‘godly fear’ (5.7).Footnote 25 Cries or tears in the LXX are often used of prayers for deliverance in times of crisis (as in Exod 3.7, 9; 2 Sam 22.7; 2 Kings 20.5; Neh 9.9; Ps 18.6; Isa 30.19; 38.5; Jonah 2.2; 2 Macc 11.6; 3 Macc 1.16; 5.7, 25).Footnote 26 The author of Hebrews depicts Jesus in the vein of a righteous sufferer who in a time of distress directs fervent prayers to the God who can deliver.

More particularly, the author may intend to place Jesus in the context of Psalm 21 LXX.Footnote 27 That he has Psalm 21 in mind is substantiated by three observations. First, the author of Hebrews refers to the passage elsewhere, which shows that he is familiar with the psalm. As already noted, the author quotes part of Psalm 21 in Hebrews 2. In addition, Heb 4.16, in which the author encourages his hearers to approach the throne of grace so that they might receive help (βοήθειαν), may parallel Ps 21.12, where the psalmist asks God to stay near to him because there is no one to help (βοηθῶν). Later, the psalmist repeats his request and this time speaks of God as his help (βοήθειαν, 21.20).Footnote 28 Second, Heb 5.8 notes that Jesus learned obedience, ‘although he was a son’. The author also adopts familial language from Psalm 21 in Heb 2.12 (‘I will tell of your name to my brothers and sisters’), and the mention of Jesus’ sonship in Heb 5.8 may echo this earlier quotation from Psalm 21. Third, Heb 5.7–9 and Psalm 21 feature a number of similar words. In Ps 21.25, the psalmist rejoices that God ‘did not despise nor abhor the prayer (τῇ δεήσει) of the poor, nor did he turn away his face from me, but when I cried (κεκραγέναι) to him he heard (εἰσήκουσεν) me’. Jesus in Heb 5.7 offers prayers (δεήσεις) with cries (κραυγῆς) and he too is heard (εἰσακουσθείς).Footnote 29 Jesus, therefore, stands firmly in the tradition of a faithful righteous sufferer who turns to God in faith in hope of deliverance.

The author does not make it clear as to what Jesus was praying for, but I suggest that Jesus is trusting God to raise him from the dead. Four observations show that Jesus prayed for deliverance out of death, and was heard by being raised.

  1. (1) Τhe author describes God as ‘the one able to save him out of death (ἐκ θανάτου)’ (5.7).Footnote 30 Ἐκ θανάτου could be translated ‘from death’ as in being saved from the experience of death, but this reading falters for three reasons. First, Jesus praying for deliverance from the experience of death makes little sense given that the author and hearers of Hebrews knew that he had in fact died. If Jesus were praying for salvation from the experience of death, then he was in fact not heard. Second, as Ellingworth rightly notes, ‘[t]he author of Hebrews insists so strongly on the positive results of Christ's suffering and death (2:9, 14; 9:15) that it is antecedently improbable that he would speak here of Christ's attempting to avoid them’.Footnote 31 The author of Hebrews depicts Jesus in 12.2 as intentionally enduring the cross ‘for the joy that was set before him’. Jesus knew of the rewards following death, and it is therefore unlikely that he is praying for deliverance from the experience of death in 5.7. Finally, the author of Hebrews consistently upholds Jesus’ suffering as a salvific act that he undertakes voluntarily (2.13; 9.26; 10.7, 9; 12.2), and so it is unlikely that he would depict Jesus as praying to avoid such suffering.Footnote 32 Jesus, therefore, prayed for deliverance despite his death. God heard Jesus’ prayers, and answered him in resurrection. If in calling God τὸν δυνάμενον σῴζειν αὐτὸν ἐκ θανάτου the author wishes to describe God as someone able to do what Jesus needed at the present time, then Jesus’ prayer as a prayer for deliverance via resurrection is more clearly in view.

  2. (2) Τhe author of Hebrews emphasises Jesus’ endurance of suffering (5.8) and his subsequent perfection (5.9). Jesus’ suffering is elsewhere associated with eschatological reward (glory and honour in 2.9; perfection in 2.10; session at the right hand of God in 12.2). So also Jesus’ suffering in 5.7–9 is probably a precursor to his enjoyment of life beyond death.

  3. (3) Τhe author says that Jesus was made perfect (τελειωθείς) after learning obedience through suffering (5.8–9). While ‘perfection’ is not a technical term for resurrection in every instance in Hebrews (as in 5.14; 6.1; 9.9; 10.1, 14), resurrection is in view each time Jesus is said to have been perfect (2.10; 5.9; 7.28). In Heb 2.9, the author introduces Jesus as one who was crowned with glory and honour because of the suffering of death (διὰ τὸ πάθημα τοῦ θανάτου). This is paralleled in 2.10, where Jesus’ perfection comes through suffering (διὰ παθημάτων). Furthermore, the author finds it fitting that God would bring many sons and daughters to glory by making the pioneer of their salvation perfect through sufferings. In the next verse, Jesus is named a brother with these sons and daughters, which suggests that he too was being brought to glory. The glory is equivalent to the perfection which Jesus experienced through suffering.Footnote 33 Therefore, perfection, glory and honour probably point to the same general idea. Further, this perfection (as well as glory and honour) comes through suffering. That this suffering is a suffering in death is clear in context.Footnote 34 Although it is not immediately clear that Jesus’ perfection comes after suffering rather than along with suffering, it is likely that his perfection follows his death. As noted above, Jesus in 2.9 is crowned with glory and honour because of the suffering of death (διὰ τὸ πάθημα τοῦ θανάτου).Footnote 35 Jesus’ glory and honour are the result of his suffering of death. Given the close similarity between glory, honour and perfection in Heb 2.9–10, we see that Jesus was made perfect after his death.Footnote 36 Outside 5.7–9, the other reference to Jesus’ perfection appears in Heb 7.28, where the author argues that Jesus’ high priesthood is contingent upon his enduring life after death.Footnote 37

    Two further points indicate that Jesus’ perfection is closely associated with resurrection in Heb 5.7–9. First, his perfection is contrasted with ‘the days of his flesh’, during which he learned through suffering.Footnote 38 ‘The days of his flesh’ clearly refers to Jesus’ days on earth, and so his perfection must relate to a time following his earthly life. Second, Jesus’ perfection through suffering in 5.9 deals with eternal salvation: ‘having been made perfect, (Jesus) became the source of eternal salvation to all who obey him’. If perfection is something that humanity hopes to share in (as 11.40 suggests), then this perfection is associated with the eternal salvation that Jesus secures. Jesus as the source of eternal salvation in 5.9 recalls Jesus as the ἀρχηγός of salvation in 2.10, where he is the one through whom God is bringing many children to glory. Perfection, then, is closely associated with the eternal salvation that Jesus secures, as God is bringing many children to glory.Footnote 39

  4. (4) Τhat Jesus is trusting God in hope of resurrection is intimated by references to Jesus being a priest forever after the order of Melchizedek in the context (5.6, 10). Hebrews 7 discusses the enigmatic figure of Melchizedek and attributes Jesus’ priesthood qualifications to his being after the order of Melchizedek. Jesus is descended from Judah (not Levi), and so is disqualified from being a priest on earth (7.14). Jesus’ priesthood is not ratified on the basis of his genealogical lineage, but on the basis of his ‘indestructible life (ζωῆς ἀκαταλύτου)’ (7.16). The author explains what he means by ‘indestructible life’ with a quotation from Ps 110.4: ‘You are a priest forever, after the order of Melchizedek’ (7.17). Melchizedek, who appears years before Levi or Aaron, is a priest of the Most High God (7.1) on the basis of his unending life (7.3). Unlike the earthly priests, whose ministries are cut short by their deaths, Jesus’ priesthood continues because he lives forever. However, the author of Hebrews is clear elsewhere that Jesus did in fact die, and so an implicit step for Jesus’ enduring life is his resurrection.Footnote 40 If Jesus’ eternal priesthood after the order of Melchizedek is possible only if he is raised, then Heb 5.7–9 fits perfectly within the cultic context of 4.14–5.10. Christ's appointment to the high priesthood is only possible by means of his resurrected life, so the author introduces Jesus’ resurrection into this discussion of Jesus’ priesthood.

Therefore, in Heb 5.7–9 we see Jesus trusting God through suffering, in hope of resurrection. This ‘one able to save him out of death’ heard Jesus’ prayers, and answered him in resurrection. Once again God is object of faith, and this faith in God is motivated by Jesus’ confidence in God as the one able to raise him from the dead.

5. Foundational Faith in God (Heb 6.1)

In Heb 6.1, the author intends to press on to maturity while not laying again a foundation of repentance from dead works and πίστεως ἐπὶ θεόν. This is the only place in Hebrews where the noun πίστις has an explicit object (θεόν). Πίστεως ἐπὶ θεόν, a unique formulation in the New Testament, is probably more than belief in God's existence (given the absence of the abstract ἔστιν as in 11.6). Instead, it is ‘trust in and fidelity to God’.Footnote 41

The author lists ‘the resurrection of the dead’ (ἀναστάσεώς τε νεκρῶν) as an elementary doctrine (6.2). The doctrines in 6.1–2 are grouped into three pairs: (1) repentance from dead works and faith towards God; (2) washings and the laying on of hands; and (3) resurrection of the dead and eternal judgement.Footnote 42 Given that resurrection of the dead is paired with eternal judgement (κρίματος αἰωνίου), it is likely that both refer to an eschatological experience.Footnote 43 As such, this resurrection is more than a resuscitation of a life that will once again end in death; it is rather a rising to an eternal life that cannot be ended. While it is not as clear here that the hope of resurrection is the motivation for faith in God, it is apparent that faith in God is associated with the hope of resurrection.

6. Faith in the God who Rewards (Heb 11.6)

At first glance, the faith expressed in Heb 11.6 is not as much faith in God as object as it is faith in attributes of God. The faith in view in 11.6 is (1) belief in God's existence,Footnote 44 and (2) trust in God's faithfulness to reward those who seek him: πιστεῦσαι γὰρ δεῖ τὸν προσερχόμενον τῷ θεῷ ὅτι (1) ἔστιν καὶ (2) τοῖς ἐκζητοῦσιν αὐτὸν μισθαποδότης γίνεται. To be sure, ‘trust’ and ‘belief’ are not mutually exclusive. ‘Trusting’ entails a ‘belief’ in the existence of the object of trust. Outside Heb 11.6, the first aspect of faith (‘belief in (the existence of God/something)’) is not a significant concept in Hebrews. On the other hand, as we have seen, faith in God as a rewarder (as in aspect 2 above) is a significant concept. Although God as object of faith is not as clear in 11.6 as elsewhere, the fact that faith is placed in God as the ‘rewarder of those who seek him’ makes it appropriate to discuss this passage here.

This second aspect of faith in 11.6 (trusting God rewards those who seek him) connects faith in God with the hope of resurrection. As noted earlier, ‘reward’ elsewhere in Hebrews refers to the eschatological hope. In this way, the description of God as one who rewards those who seek him harks back to Heb 5.7, where Jesus shows faith in ‘the one able to save him out of death’. By describing God as the ‘rewarder’, the author wishes his hearers to think of the hope of resurrection.

That Heb 11.6 refers to the hope of resurrection is further strengthened by taking into account the context of the rest of the chapter. Throughout Hebrews 11 the author presents heroes from Israel's story who exemplified faith in the context of death while looking forward to enduring life in a heavenly homeland.Footnote 45 Furthermore, the whole of Hebrews 11 is framed by associations of faith with life. In 10.39, the author reflects back on the quotation from Hab 2.3–4 and suggests confidently: ‘we are not of timidity unto destruction, but of faith unto the preservation of the soul’.Footnote 46 Likewise, in 12.2 he recalls the story of Jesus, the pioneer and perfecter of faith, whose endurance of the cross ended in glorification at the right hand of God.Footnote 47 The heroes’ stories in Hebrews 11 demonstrate a triumph of life despite death. Some exhibit faith by accepting death (11.36–7), others by faith avoid death in the face of dangerous threats (11.7, 17–19, 23, 28, 29, 31, 33–5), and still others in faith look beyond their own deaths to offer hope to the living (11.20, 21, 22). The heroes of Hebrews 11 who exemplify faith in the context of death look to the eschatological hope beyond death. The sojourning patriarchs looked forward to a God-built heavenly homeland with foundations (11.10, 14–16) and those enduring torture hoped for a ‘better resurrection’ (11.35).Footnote 48 Within this context, the description of God as ‘the one who rewards (μισθαποδότης) those who seek him’ (11.6) probably alludes to this eschatological hope as well.

Heb 11.6, therefore, is another association of faith in God and the hope of resurrection. Those wishing to draw near to God need to believe that God exists, and trust that God will reward with resurrection those who seek him.

7. Abraham's Faith in God (Heb 11.11–12, 17–19)

Since Heb 11.11–12 and 11.17–19 both involve Abraham and share other similar themes, I address these passages together. In Heb 11.11–12, Abraham, along with Sarah,Footnote 49 received the power to procreate, and considered God who promised faithful. While the author does not use a πιστ- word, Abraham's ‘considering the one who promised faithful’ (11.11) is rightly understood as Abraham's faith in God. Similarly, that Abraham ‘considered that God was able even to raise the dead’ (11.19) also refers to Abraham's faith in God.

In both 11.11–12 and 11.17–19, Abraham's faith in God is based on his hope in God's ability to resurrect. In the first case, Abraham hopes for a figurative resurrection, a resurrection of his ‘dead’ body (ἀφ᾽ ἑνὸς … νενεκρωμένου), so that he might father children with Sarah.Footnote 50 In 11.17–19, the author credits Abraham's offering of Isaac to Abraham's consideration that ‘God was even able to raise someone from the dead’ (11.19). This probably refers not to Abraham's hope of an eschatological resurrection, but to an immediate resuscitation to life. The implication here seems to be that Abraham expected that if he did have to kill his promised son, then God could bring him back to life again, as God did do ‘in parable (ἐν παραβολῇ)’ (11.19).Footnote 51 Even so, Abraham shows a faith in God motivated by his trust in God's ability to raise the dead.

Abraham's faith in 11.17–19 reflects Jesus’ faith in 5.7–9. In both cases, we see the pattern of faith in God connected with the hope of resurrection.Footnote 52 Most significantly, God's power to save people out of death ‘appears to be the primary element of faith being emphasized in both passages’.Footnote 53 Abraham, by willingly offering his son as a sacrifice, trusts God to fulfil his promise, even if Isaac died on the altar.Footnote 54 Therefore, in both Heb 11.11–12 and 11.17–19 we see Abraham's trust in God connected with his hope of resurrection, either figuratively (11.11–12) or literally (11.17–19).

8. Conclusion

Having looked at all cases where God is object of faith, we find that the motivation for this faith in each case is the hope that God will resurrect. This connection between faith in God and the hope of life after death provides a pastoral word to the hearers of Hebrews, who had faced persecution in the past. The author recalls their former days, when after ‘being enlightened’ they ‘endured a great conflict of sufferings, partly by being made a public spectacle through reproaches and tribulations, and partly by becoming sharers with those so treated’ (10.32–3). He praises them for previously ‘showing sympathy to the prisoners and accepting joyfully the seizure of their property’ (10.34). Furthermore, in encouraging the hearers to remember their former leaders and consider the outcome of their conduct, the author also probably alludes to leaders of the community who died for their faith.Footnote 55

The author also expects them to face persecution in the future. Following the encomium on faith in the face of death in Heb 11 (as addressed above) and the depiction of Jesus’ endurance of suffering in 12.2–3, in 12.4 he ominously says that the hearers have not yet resisted to the point of bloodshed in the struggle against sin. The ‘sin’ against which they struggle is probably a periphrasis for the ‘sinners’ from whom Jesus experienced hostility (12.3).Footnote 56 ‘Not yet’ (οὔπω) appears emphatically as the first word in the sentence. In view of the hearers’ previous experience of persecution, the author in 12.4 is likely anticipating future bloody persecution for the community. This future persecution may be anticipated by imprisoned members of the community or those known by the community (like Timothy, 13.23),Footnote 57 of whom the author encourages the hearers to ‘remember those in prison, as though in prison with them, and those who are mistreated, since you yourselves also are in the body’ (13.3).

The author of Hebrews exhorts this community who had been persecuted, is expected to be persecuted and may be persecuted currently (either in actuality or in their perception)Footnote 58 to be faithful. As I have argued at length elsewhere, faith in Hebrews is usually not a faith/trust/belief in an object, but rather an active faithfulness.Footnote 59 Here we have investigated each case where faith has an object, and in each case that object is God. This faith in God, however, does not exclude the active faithfulness we see encouraged throughout Hebrews. Instead, faith in God (and in particular a faith in God's power to resurrect) gives motivation to faithfulness, expressed both in terms of bold endurance and patient hope. Boldness is possible because God promised the eschatological hope, and patience is necessary because God has not yet ushered in this hope.Footnote 60 Jesus models this faith in God, as well as faithful endurance to the point of death (2.13; 5.7–9). With Jesus as their model and with their faith in the resurrecting God as their motivation, the author calls his hearers to be faithful in the face of their own deaths, and together to ‘go to Jesus outside the camp, bearing his reproach, for here we do not have a lasting city, but we seek the city that is to come’ (13.13–14).

References

1 Ultimately, this will further support my larger project in Hebrews, which connects faith with the hope of resurrection ( Easter, M. C., Faith and the Faithfulness of Jesus in Hebrews (SNTSMS, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2014)CrossRefGoogle Scholar). It also builds on David Moffitt's work, which has done much to show the central importance of the resurrection for Hebrews ( Moffitt, D. M., Atonement and the Logic of Resurrection (NovTSup 141; Leiden: Brill, 2011)CrossRefGoogle Scholar). Moffitt likewise sees a connection between faith in God and God's power to resurrect, but he does not develop this theme in as much detail (pp. 184, 191)).

2 See, among others, Hamm, D., ‘Faith in the Epistle to the Hebrews: The Jesus Factor’, CBQ 52.2 (1990) 272, 291Google Scholar; Hurst, L. D., The Epistle to the Hebrews: Its Background of Thought (SNTSMS 65; Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990) 119–20CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Thomas, C. A., A Case for Mixed-Audience with Reference to the Warning Passages in the Book of Hebrews (New York: Peter Lang, 2008) 259–60Google Scholar; Westcott, B. F., The Epistle to the Hebrews: The Greek Text with Notes and Essays (originally published 1889; Eugene, OR: Wipf and Stock, 2001) 395Google Scholar. For more on my engagement with those who find Jesus as object of faith, see Easter, Faith and the Faithfulness of Jesus in Hebrews, 187–94.

3 Hurtado, L. W., Lord Jesus Christ: Devotion to Jesus in Earliest Christianity (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2003) 497Google Scholar (emphasis added).

4 See my discussion in Easter, Faith and the Faithfulness of Jesus in Hebrews, 198–9.

5 Hamm, ‘Faith’, 291.

6 Hurst, The Epistle to the Hebrews, 120. See also deSilva, D., Perseverance in Gratitude: A Socio-Rhetorical Commentary on the Epistle ‘to the Hebrews’ (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2000) 494Google Scholar; Koester, C. R., Hebrews (AB 36; New York: Doubleday, 2001) 567Google Scholar; and Lane, W. L., Hebrews 9–13 (WBC 47B; Dallas: Word, 1991) 528Google Scholar.

7 On the outcome (ἔκβασις) as their death, see Attridge, H. W., The Epistle to the Hebrews (Hermeneia; Philadelphia: Fortress, 1989) 392Google Scholar; deSilva, Perseverance in Gratitude, 494; Ellingworth, P., The Epistle to the Hebrews (NIGTC; Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1993) 703Google Scholar; and Koester, Hebrews, 567.

8 See also Grässer, E., Der Glaube im Hebräerbrief (Marburger Theologische Studien 2; Marburg: N. G. Elwert, 1965) 2930 Google Scholar.

9 On this connection, see also Ellingworth, Hebrews, 706; Hamm, ‘Faith’, 275; Lane, Hebrews 9–13, 528–9.

10 For instance, Hamm, ‘Faith’, 291.

11 Rhee, V. (S.-Y.), Faith in Hebrews: Analysis within the Context of Christology, Eschatology, and Ethics (Studies in Biblical Literature 19; New York: Peter Lang, 2001) 56Google Scholar.

12 Rhee, Faith in Hebrews, 125. This, however, contradicts his earlier claim, where he writes: ‘In 6:1 the author of Hebrews clearly makes a distinction between Christ and God. For this reason the phrase ‘faith toward God’ (πίστεως ἐπὶ θεόν) suggests that the object of faith is not Jesus, but God the Father’ (p. 58).

13 This essay, then, is driven by the question of why people have faith in God in Hebrews, and not the question of how resurrection plays an instrumental role in Hebrews. Here again on this question I defer to Moffitt, Atonement. For the resurrection of Jesus and humanity's hope of resurrection, see Easter, Faith and the Faithfulness of Jesus in Hebrews, 107–31.

14 This phrase appears in 2 Sam 22.3; Isa 8.17; 12.2. Given that the latter half of Heb 2.13 (‘behold, I and the children God has given me’) is from Isa 8.18, the author is most likely quoting Isa 8.17 with ἐγὼ ἔσομαι πεποιθὼς ἐπ’ αὐτῷ.

15 DeSilva, Perseverance in Gratitude, 116.

16 Goldingay, J., Psalms, vol. i: Psalms 1–41 (Baker Commentary on the Old Testament Wisdom and Psalms; Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2006) 340Google Scholar.

17 Lane, W. L., Hebrews 1–8 (WBC 47A; Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson, 1991) 59Google Scholar.

18 See also Guthrie, G. H., ‘Hebrews’, Commentary on the New Testament Use of the Old Testament (ed. Beale, G. K. and Carson, D. A.; Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2007) 949Google Scholar.

19 Craigie, P. C., Psalms 1–50 (WBC 19; Waco, TX: Word Books, 1983)Google Scholar 203 (emphasis original).

20 deSilva, D., ‘Entering God's Rest: Eschatology and the Socio-Rhetorical Strategy of Hebrews’, TJ 21 (2000) 2543, at 38–9Google Scholar; Son, K., Zion Symbolism in Hebrews: Hebrews 12:18–24 as a Hermeneutical Key to the Epistle (Paternoster Biblical Monographs; Milton Keynes: Paternoster, 2005) 138–9Google Scholar.

21 Backhaus, K., ‘Das Land der Verheißung: Die Heimat der Glaubenden im Hebräerbrief’, NTS 47 (2001) 171–88, esp. at 178CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

22 Moffitt, Atonement, 50–2.

23 That Jesus’ peers were not angels is clear in 1.5 and 1.13, where the author introduces the psalm quotations with ‘To which of the angels has he ever said?’

24 Moffitt, Atonement, 143. See also Heb 9.12, where Jesus enters the heavenly holy places ‘through his own blood (διὰ δὲ τοῦ ἰδίου αἵματος)’, a marker of humanity. Noted also by Motyer, S., ‘“Not Apart from Us” (Hebrews 11:40): Physical Community in the Letter to the Hebrews’, EQ 77.3 (2005) 235–47, at 239Google Scholar.

25 Gray, P., Godly Fear: The Epistle to the Hebrews and Greco-Roman Critiques of Superstition (SBL Academia Biblica 16; Atlanta: SBL, 2003) 188205 Google Scholar. See also Maurer, C., ‘“Erhört wegen der Gottesfurcht”, Hebr 5,7’, Neues Testament und Geschichte: Historisches Geschehen und Deutung im Neuen Testament. Oscar Cullmann zum 70. Geburtstag (ed. Reicke, B. and Baltensweiler, H.; Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 1972) 275–84Google Scholar.

26 See also Philo, Leg. 3.213; Her. 19; and esp. Det. 92–93. Attridge, Hebrews, 151 nn. 172 and 173; Koester, Hebrews, 288.

27 Hebrews shows little engagement with other traditions of the righteous sufferer in the LXX, such as Isaiah 53 and Wis 2.12–20. Heb 9.28 (εἰς τὸ πολλῶν ἀνενεγκεῖν ἁμαρτίας) probably alludes to Isa 53.12 (αὐτὸς ἁμαρτίας πολλῶν ἀνήνεγκεν), but beyond this reference, the author of Hebrews does not explicitly depict Jesus as the Isaian servant (see Hofius, O., ‘The Fourth Servant Song in the New Testament Letters’, The Suffering Servant: Isaiah 53 in Jewish and Christian Sources (ed. Janowski, B. and Stuhlmacher, P.; Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2004) 163–88, at 184–5Google Scholar). While we need not eliminate the possibility that the author of Hebrews is informed by Isaiah 53 and/or Wis 2.12–20, Psalm 21 is more clearly in view for the reasons I adduce.

28 Richardson, C., ‘The Passion: Reconsidering Hebrews 5.7–8’, A Cloud of Witnesses: The Theology of Hebrews in its Ancient Contexts (ed. Bauckham, R. et al. ; Library of New Testament Studies 387; London: T&T Clark, 2008) 5167, at 66 n. 58Google Scholar.

29 Bruce, F. F., The Epistle to the Hebrews (NICNT; Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1990, revised edn) 128Google Scholar.

30 For others reading ἐκ θανάτου as ‘out of death’, see Attridge, Hebrews, 150; Gray, Godly Fear, 192; Kurianal, J., Jesus our High Priest: Ps 110,4 as the Substructure of Heb 5,1–7,28 (European University Studies 693; Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang, 2000) 70Google Scholar; Moffitt, D. M., ‘“If Another Priest Arises”: Jesus’ Resurrection and the High Priestly Christology of Hebrews’, A Cloud of Witnesses, 6879, at 69–70Google Scholar; Richardson, ‘Passion’, 60; and Westcott, Hebrews, 124, 126. For ἐκ θανάτου as resurrection elsewhere, see Sir 48.5.

31 Ellingworth, Hebrews, 288.

32 Richardson, ‘Passion’, 61.

33 On the association between perfection and glory, see also Kurianal, Jesus our High Priest, 228–9; Scholer, J. M., Proleptic Priests: Priesthood in the Epistle to the Hebrews (JSNTSup 49; Sheffield: Sheffield Academic, 1991) 195–6Google Scholar. For parallels between suffering, exaltation and perfection in Hebrews, see the chart in Silva, M., ‘Perfection and Eschatology in Hebrews’, WTJ 39.1 (1976) 6071, at 66Google Scholar.

34 In 2:9, the suffering is a suffering of death (τὸ πάθημα τοῦ θανάτου) and Jesus tasted death for everyone. In 2:14, Jesus destroys the one with the power of death through his death.

35 On διά with the accusative as causal, see Wallace, Daniel B., Greek Grammar: Beyond the Basics (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1996) 369Google Scholar.

36 See also deSilva, Perseverance in Gratitude, 197; Jipp, Joshua W., ‘The Son's Entrance into the Heavenly World: The Soteriological Necessity of the Scriptural Catena in Hebrews 1.5-14,’ NTS 56 (2010) 557–75, at 570–1CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Kurianal, Jesus Our High Priest, 300–301 and 300 n 42.

37 See Moffitt, Atonement, 200–8.

38 DeSilva, Perseverance in Gratitude, 198.

39 Loader, W. R. G., Sohn und Hoherpriester: Eine traditionsgeschichtliche Untersuchung zur Christologie des Hebräerbriefes (WMANT 53; Neukirchen-Vluyn: Neukirchener, 1981) 43Google Scholar.

40 So also Kurianal, Jesus our High Priest, 232; Michel, O., Der Brief an die Hebräer (KEK 13; Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1936) 62Google Scholar; Moffitt, ‘If Another Priest Arises’, 75–6.

41 Attridge, Hebrews, 164.

42 Attridge, Hebrews, 163.

43 See also Attridge, Hebrews, 163; Moffitt, Atonement, 184.

44 On πιστεῦσαι … ὅτι ἔστιν as ‘believe that God exists’, see Attridge, Hebrews, 318; Koester, Hebrews, 476; Lane, Hebrews 9–13, 338.

45 This is widely recognised. See, among others, Bulley, A. D., ‘Death and Rhetoric in the Hebrews “Hymn to Faith”’, SR 25.4 (1996) 413–17Google Scholar; Cockerill, G. L., ‘The Better Resurrection (Heb. 11:35): A Key to the Structure and Rhetorical Purpose of Hebrews 11’, TynBul 51.2 (2000) 215–34Google Scholar; Eisenbaum, P. M., The Jewish Heroes of Christian History: Hebrews 11 in Literary Context (SBLDS 156; Atlanta: Scholars, 1997) 178–9Google Scholar; Lane, W. L., ‘Living a Life of Faith in the Face of Death: The Witness of Hebrews’, Life in the Face of Death: The Resurrection Message of the New Testament (ed. Longenecker, R. N.; Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1998) 257Google Scholar; Moffitt, Atonement, 185; Swetnam, J., Jesus and Isaac: A Study in the Epistle to the Hebrews in Light of the Akedah (Rome: Biblical Institute, 1981) 86–9Google Scholar.

46 On the connection between Heb 10.37–9 and Hebrews 11, see Gheorghita, R., The Role of the Septuagint in Hebrews: An Investigation of its Influence with Special Consideration to the Use of Hab 2:3–4 in Heb 10:37–38 (WUNT ii/160; Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2003) 181Google Scholar; Haacker, K., ‘Der Glaube im Hebräerbrief und die hermeneutische Bedeutung des Holocaust’, TZ 39 (1983) 152–65, at 155Google Scholar. For my treatment of Hebrews 10.37–9, see Easter, Faith and the Faithfulness of Jesus in Hebrews, 165–78.

47 For my treatment of Hebrews 12.1–2, see Easter, Faith and the Faithfulness of Jesus in Hebrews, 133–54.

48 This could be another example of faith in God coordinating with the hope of resurrection, but since no object of faith is explicitly or implicitly named here, I am not addressing it in the current study.

49 The translation of Heb 11.11 is notoriously difficult, as either Sarah or Abraham can be the subject of δύναμιν εἰς καταβολὴν σπέρματος ἔλαβεν (‘received power to procreate’). Our decision on the subject of this phrase determines the subject of πιστὸν ἡγήσατο τὸν ἐπαγγειλάμενον (‘considered the one who promised faithful’). Here I adopt the Abraham reading, following Attridge, Hebrews, 325–6; deSilva, Perseverance in Gratitude, 398–9; Koester, Hebrews, 487–8; and Lane, Hebrews 9–13, 344–5. Two reasons for understanding Abraham as the subject in 11.11 are that (1) εἰς καταβολὴν σπέρματος is a standard Hellenistic idiom for the male's procreative function and (2) Abraham is the subject of 11.12 (ἑνός and νενεκρωμένου are both masculine). Iota subscripts were commonly omitted in the dative in uncial manuscripts, and if this were the case here, then αὐτὴ Σάρρα may be read as a dative of accompaniment (αὐτῇ Σάρρᾳ), rather than a nominative (αὐτὴ Σάρρα). By this reading, one could translate the beginning of 11.11 as: ‘By faith also, along with Sarah, he received power to procreate’ (see Attridge, Hebrews, 325–6; Ellingworth, Hebrews, 587–8). The subject of πιστὸν ἡγήσατο τὸν ἐπαγγειλάμενον would then be Abraham: ‘he considered the one who promised faithful’. Nevertheless, a firm decision on this question does not impact our argument here. Whether it is Abraham or Sarah who expresses faith, in either case the faith being expressed is a faith in God in hope of resurrection.

50 Abraham is described in similar terms in Rom 4.19.

51 See also Moffitt, Atonement, 186.

52 For parallels to Heb 5.7–9, see Moffitt, Atonement, 192–3.

53 Moffitt, Atonement, 192.

54 So also Moffitt, Atonement, 185.

55 As noted above, this ‘outcome’ (ἔκβασις) is probably the leaders’ deaths.

56 Andriessen, P. C. B., ‘La communauté des ‘Hébreux’: Etait-elle tombée dans le relâchement?’, NRTh 96 (1974) 1054–66, at 1062Google Scholar; Braun, H., An die Hebräer (HNT 14; Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 1984) 409Google Scholar; Lane, ‘Living a Life of Faith’, 250–1.

57 On Timothy's possible imprisonment, see Attridge, Hebrews, 409.

58 On perceived persecution, see Lane, ‘Living a Life of Faith’, 248: ‘And while they may not have been under actual persecution at the time, the perception of persecution can be just as shaking to a community as persecution itself’.

59 See especially Easter, Faith and the Faithfulness of Jesus in Hebrews, 181–214.

60 Koester, Hebrews, 310; Schunack, G., ‘Exegetische Beobachtungen zum Verständnis des Glaubens im Hebräerbrief’, Text und Geschichte: Facetten theologischen Arbeitens aus dem Freundes- und Schülerkreis. Dieter Lührmann zum 60 Geburstag (ed. Maser, Stefan; Marburger Theologische Studien 50; Marburg: N. G. Elwert, 1999) 209–32, at 231Google Scholar; Söding, T., ‘Zuversicht und Geduld im Schauen auf Jesus: Zum Glaubensbegriff des Hebräersbriefes’, ZNW 82 (1991) 214–41, at 223–4CrossRefGoogle Scholar.