Heb 12:1-29. EXHORTATION TO FOLLOW THE WITNESSES OF FAITH JUST MENTIONED: NOT TO FAINT IN TRIALS: TO REMOVE ALL BITTER ROOTS OF SIN: FOR WE ARE UNDER, NOT A LAW OF TERROR, BUT THE GOSPEL OF GRACE, TO DESPISE WHICH WILL BRING THE HEAVIER PENALTIES, IN PROPORTION TO OUR GREATER PRIVILEGES.
1. we also--as well as those recounted in
Heb 12:11.
are compassed about--Greek, "have so great a cloud (a
numberless multitude above us, like a cloud, 'holy and
pellucid,'
[CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA]) of
witnesses surrounding us." The image is from a "race," an image common
even in Palestine from the time of the Greco-Macedonian empire, which
introduced such Greek usages as national games. The "witnesses"
answer to the spectators pressing round to see the competitors in their
contest for the prize
(Php 3:14).
Those "witnessed of" (Greek,
Heb 11:5, 39)
become in their turn "witnesses" in a twofold way: (1) attesting by
their own case the faithfulness of God to His people
[ALFORD]
(Heb 6:12),
some of them martyrs in the modern sense; (2) witnessing our
struggle of faith; however, this second sense of "witnesses," though
agreeing with the image here if it is to be pressed, is not
positively, unequivocally, and directly sustained by
Scripture. It gives vividness to the image; as the crowd of spectators
gave additional spirit to the combatants, so the cloud of
witnesses who have themselves been in the same contest, ought to
increase our earnestness, testifying, as they do, to God's
faithfulness.
weight--As corporeal unwieldiness was, through a disciplinary
diet, laid aside by candidates for the prize in racing; so carnal and
worldly lusts, and all, whether from without or within, that would
impede the heavenly runner, are the spiritual weight to be laid
aside. "Encumbrance," all superfluous weight; the lust of the
flesh, the lust of the eye, and the pride of life, and even harmless
and otherwise useful things which would positively retard us
(Mr 10:50,
the blind man casting away his garment to come to Jesus;
Mr 9:42-48;
compare
Eph 4:22;
Col 3:9, 10).
the sin which doth so easily beset us--Greek, "sin which
easily stands around us"; so LUTHER, "which always
so clings to us": "sinful propensity always surrounding us, ever
present and ready" [WAHL]. It is not primarily
"the sin," &c., but sin in general, with, however,
special reference to "apostasy," against which he had already warned
them, as one to which they might gradually be seduced; the
besetting sin of the Hebrews, UNBELIEF.
with patience--Greek, "in persevering endurance"
(Heb 10:36).
On "run" compare
1Co 9:24, 25.
JFB.
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