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11/05/07
Comments (5)

Imitate Their Faith

It was near the end of the book of Hebrews that I found some verses that have been bouncing around in my head for some time now. With the epistle drawing to a close, the pastor who authored this letter exhorts the believers to remember the men who had once led the church, to consider how these men lived, and to imitate their faith. “Remember your leaders,” he says, “those who spoke to you the word of God. Consider the outcome of their way of life, and imitate their faith.”

That verse has given me a lot to think about. God, working through the written words of an anonymous pastor who lived 2,000 years ago, challenged me to consider men who once spoke the word of God—men whose lives I should consider that I might imitate their faith. Unlike the recipients of this letter, I do not have a long legacy of being in a church where leaders have served for decades and have finished well. I have been more of a church pilgrim, often moving from one town to the next through my childhood and early years of my marriage. At long last we’ve settled in a town and in a church where we hope to remain for the long haul. But as I considered these verses I thought of a church like Tenth Presbyterian Church in Philadelphia, a church that has prospered under the long ministries of men like Donald Barnhouse (33 years), James Montgomery Boice (32 years) and Phillip Ryken (12 years and counting). People who attend churches like that and who have been members of such churches for many years will be able to look to the past and to consider how these men lived. From there they can learn about the faith that sustained these pastors and then imitate that faith.

Not all of us have been so privileged. But we have the ability to find heroes in history by reading good biographies. And this is, I think, one of the reasons I am so often drawn to biographies of great Christians. Through these books we are able to read about the faith of Christians who served God through their lives and then finished strong. John Piper says, “This is why dead heroes are more important than living heroes. Living heroes are important, but they might cease to be heroes before they die. They might let you down. Rather, he says, ‘remember’ - that’s a word that reaches into the past. Remember those whose conduct you can survey from beginning to end, and consider all of it - especially how it ended.” It is really only when the final chapter has closed in death that we may know how a man has lived. Dead heroes harbor few surprises.

It is important to note that the exhortation is not to imitate these men—it is not to ponder their lives and then to imitate their conduct. Rather, the author exhorts people to ponder the outcome of these lives, to see how these men finished their races, and, having found worthy examples, to imitate their faith. John Piper sounds an important warning about imitating the conduct of others. “If you try to imitate their conduct, you become a religious fake, a spiritual counterfeit. This is a frightening reality when you see it - people who have learned the forms of godliness and know nothing of the power that comes from genuine faith. Instead he says: look at the whole course of their conduct and how they finished their course, and get the same motor that made them what they were: their faith.”

Verse seven cannot be separated from the verse that follows. “Jesus Christ is the same yesterday and today and forever.” Jesus Christ is the same today as He was when these men led the church and when they encouraged your faith. Jesus was worth serving then and He is worth serving now; Jesus sustained these men even through times of hardship and He can and will sustain you in the same way. Though months and seasons and years come and go, Jesus remains the same—still available, still powerful, still in control. Richard Phillips writes, “The writer’s confidence is not in men of God; it is in the God of men.” Though we are to imitate the faith of these men, we are to see this faith as a gift of God and to place our confidence in God who gives faith, not in men who express it.

By way of conclusion, Richard Phillips says, “This is the greatest legacy any of us can impart from the pattern of our lives, and it is by providing such examples that Christian leaders most powerfully serve the Lord and his church.” The questions I had to ask myself were these: First, whose faith am I imitating? Who are the Christians of days gone by whose faith serves as an example to me. And second, what will my legacy be? Will I leave behind a pattern of trust and faithful service that another person may find worthy of imitation, or will I be fearful and faithless, leaving behind a legacy I’d want no one to imitate?

Perhaps your faith would also be served by pondering those same questions in light of Hebrews 13.

Imitate Their Faith

Comments (5) »


1. Ray Miller
November 5, 2007
12:27 PM

“imitate their faith” If the leaders of the early church, of whom, the author of the epistle to the Hebrews exhorts us to imitate their faith, were those we read about from the pages of the New Testament, they had much to be commended for. They endured trials, hardships, suffering, and persecution. In this they were comparable to the Old Testament saints this author mentions in the 11th chapter.

To imitate their faith is to endure patiently and joyfully for the glory of Jesus Christ when we face the same kind of hardships and sufferings they did. Most of us in North America have not yet experienced this same kind of suffering although we may have experienced hardships of one degree or another. Should we look forward to the possibility of more severe sufferings? Perhaps not, but when they become a reality, we can rejoice that we have been counted worthy to suffer for the glory of Christ and to count it as joy whenever we face these trials.

Ray Miller


2. Matt
November 5, 2007
12:52 PM

I heard Chip Ingram encouraging a personal Mount Rushmore. The faces of people who have indelibly shaped my faith. Who are the faces on my Mount Rushmore? Why?


3. donsands
November 5, 2007
5:30 PM

Nice post.

I have a friends who are good examples, and yet they’re sinners saved by grace as I. And we can disappoint one another, and even hurt one another. That’s the Church sinners helping sinners by His grace and Spirit.

One of my dead faith examples is Martin Luther, and yet he did some horrible things as well.

Another example for me Joni. She is someone who almost always humbles me, though lifts me up as well.

BTW, I was able to visit Tenth Pres, and hear Dr. Boyce. What a preacher! A a fine example for us all.


4. Tim
November 5, 2007
6:00 PM

I have known several men whom I would do well to imitate. I regret that I haven’t done that as well as I should. I believe I will try to do better. Thanks for the post.


5. Cheryl
November 6, 2007
6:48 AM

I just read the passage in Hebrews 13. With respect to our leaders, I think the most difficult challenge for our American churches is with 13:17: “Obey your leaders and submit to them, for they are keeping watch over your souls …” It goes against the very grain of our ruggedly individualistic, “question authority” native personality. I have witnessed this attitude within myself and others in my local church. It’s akin to the ‘haustafel’ section in Ephesians (5-6) (e.g. wives submit to your own husband), where God has ordained a certain order and the Spirit’s filling is a condition precedent in order for us to walk in it.