Patience and Old Testament Examples;
James
It is difficult to live
the Christian life. We are constantly being tested, our faith is constantly
being challenged, and it is up to our volition to determine whether we are
ready to meet that challenge. The problem is there are many believers who are
failures in the Christian life and they are going to be losers at the judgment
seat of Christ because they have not been willing to face the challenge to
endure. That is the theme of James in this epistle: endurance, perseverance. It
is the Greek word HUPOMONE [u(pomonh]
which means to stay in there under pressure, HUPO = under; MENO = to remain
under, meaning to stay in the midst of that outside pressure of adversity by
applying doctrine consistently so that you can avoid converting that outside
pressure of adversity into stress in the soul. As James come to his conclusion in
5:7 he returns to this theme of patience and endurance.
James
KAKOPATHIAS is the combination of a word for evil and a word for
emotion, but it doesn’t have anything to do with evil emotion. It has to do
with suffering, going through difficult times and it has undertones of the
hardship and the suffering that the person goes through in times of the outside
pressure of adversity. When you go through outside pressure of adversity there
is always an emotional reaction. This issue is not that you have a certain
emotional reaction or not and that that is wrong or right, it is automatic; the
issue is: what are you going to do with it? That is where volition comes to
play. Whenever we hit adversity, sometimes there is instant discouragement,
sometimes instant anger, resentment, bitterness, shock,
whatever it may be. The issue is what you are going to do with that. Are you
going to let that stay there and continue bitterness, anger, etc., or are you
instantly going to confess, move on, orient to the Lord and not get involved in
emotional sins.
What James is saying here
is that in the Old Testament there are many examples of suffering and patience.
The word for patience is MAKROTHUMIA [makroqumia].
The construction is interesting. There is an article noun, the conjunction KAI [kai], and then article noun. What this indicates is that
there is a connection between the two nouns which indicates that they are
closely linked together. Suffering in
patience would be one way of translating it, but instead of saying suffering in
patience the author just says suffering and patience, links them together
grammatically. So, “As an example of suffering in patience [applying patience
in times of adversity], take the prophets who spoke in the name of he Lord.” So
here he is going to cast us back to the Old Testament prophets to see how they
handled the outside pressure of adversity. They clearly went through adversity.
Jesus refers to this in Matthew
A personal sense of
eternal destiny changed and motivated the life of Old Testament saints. Hebrew
11:1 NASB “Now faith is the assurance of {things} hoped for, the
conviction of things not seen.” The word translated “hoped for” is a participial
form of ELPIZO [e)lpizw]. It doesn’t mean hope like we normally use it, like “I
really hope it is a nice weekend,” i.e. an optimistic wish but there is no
certainty or conviction whatsoever. ELPIZO means confident expectation. There is a certainty of
what will transpire. That is what we mean by a personal sense of eternal
destiny. There is a certainty that the Judge is standing at the door. So faith
is the assurance of things confidently expected, the
conviction of things not seen. We have such a conviction that the reality of
the judgment seat of Christ is so overwhelming and real and present to us that
it is dominating every decision in the present time. This is the introduction
to Hebrew 11, that these are going to be examples. All
of the Old Testament saints who are portrayed here are examples of those who
had such a level of confidence of what would happened that it revolutionized
their present tense decision-making.
Hebrews 11:2 NASB
“For by it the men of old gained approval.” That is a poor translation. They did
not gain approval. The concept of approval would be the Greek verb DOKIMAZO [dokimazw]. The word here is MARTUREO [marturew] which means a testimony: For by it [faith/doctrine] the
men of old had a testimony. It is that personal sense of eternal destiny that
so impacts our present tense decision making that it creates a life that is a
testimony to the angels in heaven in the angelic conflict and to man on earth. This
is when we really begin to live the spiritual life and reap the benefits of it.
Hebrews 11:6 NASB
“And without faith it is impossible to please {Him,} for he who comes to God
must believe that He is and {that} He is a rewarder of those who seek Him.” There
are two doctrines there that are the object of the verb “believe,” one that God
exists, and two, that He is a rewarder of those who seek Him. The whole concept
of rewards in Scripture entails the judgment seat of Christ, 2 Corinthians
5:10; 1 Corinthians 3:10-13. So this is that personal sense of eternal destiny
again. It is emphasizing the fact that God rewards those who seek Him. In verse
7 we see a clear example of how a personal sense of eternal destiny helped Noah
deal with the greatest meteorological disaster in all of human history—by faith,
by trusting God and understanding specific doctrines in relationship to God, “Noah,
being warned {by God} about things not
yet seen, in reverence prepared an ark for the salvation [deliverance] of
his household, by which he condemned the world, and became an heir of the
righteousness which is according to faith.” So Noah faces a problem and because
he understands that God has a plan and purpose in history and he understands where
history is going he is going to make present tense decisions in light of future
events. That is how a personal sense of eternal destiny solves problems. “…became
an heir of the righteousness which is according to faith.” This brings in the
important concept of inheritance, which is not the same as salvation, as
entering into heaven. It is talking about the fact that by trusting God in a particular
way at a particular time in relation to a particular problem, Noah gained an
eternal position as an heir of righteousness, which is according to the norm or
standard of the doctrine in his soul. So there will be rewards for Noah,
rewards for Old Testament saints. The Scripture is not clear when this will be.
We know that church age believers will be rewarded at the judgment seat of
Christ. Old Testament saints are not resurrected until the end of the
Tribulation. The only other judgment that the Scriptures speak of is the great
white throne judgment, but that is for unbelievers alone.
Then we have the example
of Abraham. Hebrews 11:8 NASB “By faith Abraham, when he was
called, obeyed by going out to a place which he was to receive for an inheritance;
and he went out, not knowing where he was going.” Abraham was already a
believer, his eternal destiny was already determined. But this is not what this
is talking about; it is talking about inheritance, his possession in the land that
was promised to him in the Abrahamic covenant. [9] By
faith [trusting in specific doctrines] he lived as an alien in the land of
promise, as in a foreign {land,} dwelling in tents with Isaac and Jacob, fellow
heirs of the same promise;
Romans
So Abraham is said to have
inheritance, as is Isaac and Jacob, but they never actually received that
inheritance; it was still something in the future: “for he was looking for the
city which has foundations, whose architect and builder is God.” They were
confident that God would provide it. They had confident expectations that were
future. They never realized it on earth; they will realize it eventually. Because
they anticipated the fulfilment of the promise it impacted their decisions that
they made during life.
Hebrews 11:17 NASB
“By faith [by means of trusting in specific doctrines] Abraham, when he was tested,
offered up Isaac, and he who had received the promises was offering up his only
begotten {son;} [18] {it was he} to whom it was said, “IN ISAAC YOUR DESCENDANTS SHALL BE CALLED.” [19] He considered that God is able to raise
{people} even from the dead, from which he also received him back as a type.” He
anticipated the future and on the basis of future reality, confident
expectation of what the future would be, he made present tense decisions.
Hebrews
This is what James is
referring to, that we are to look at the examples of the Old Testament prophets
and their example of suffering and patience in the midst of suffering.
James
James 5:12 NASB
“But above all, my brethren, do not swear, either by heaven or by earth or with
any other oath; but your yes is to be yes, and your no, no, so that you may not
fall under judgment.” “Above all” does not mean highest priority here, it is merely a rhetorical device to emphasize a shift
in thought. What James means in this verse is simply: don’t get involved in the
sins of the tongue.