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ReVision

Seeing is Believing

The proof of faith is found here.

You Ought to Be Teachers! (5)

For it is impossible for those who were once enlightened, and have tasted the heavenly gift, and have become partakers of the Holy Spirit, and have tasted the good word of God and the powers of the age to come, if they fall away, to renew them again to repentance, since they crucify again for themselves the Son of God, and put Him to an open shame. Hebrews 6.4-6

The meaning of faith
We need the milk of Christian faith. It’s the starting point for all we believe and everything we seek in learning to follow Jesus. We need to linger a bit more over the basic principles of the Christian faith, as the writer of Hebrews referred to these in Hebrews 5.12, and sketched them in Hebrews 6.1, 2.

The question he is focusing on in this passage – a question central to his entire book – is what it actually means to believe in these basic principles and elementary doctrines. This is a difficult passage and can only be fully understood in the light of Hebrews 6.9-12.

Here the writer tells us how we can be confident that we actually do believe the things we profess. One reason many Christians have not begun to teach their fellow believers or to share the Good News of Jesus with their lost neighbors is that they’ve never really come to saving faith themselves. Thus, they lack the Spirit of God to empower them for witness or enable them to teach others the things of Jesus Christ. That this might have been the situation of at least some of those to whom the book of Hebrews was addressed is certainly possible.

Alternately, some believers may not have been confident about their salvation, so that they freely and happily talked about it with others. They may have been truly saved, but because they lacked assurance of salvation or outward evidences of it, they had no confidence in their ability to teach it to others.

All diligence?
Look at the cautious and tentative way the writer refers to some people who never go on to maturity or to their responsibility to teach the things of Christ. He mentions those who have been once enlightened in God’s truth, perhaps just enough to help them see that they needed something more than what their sin-darkened lives were providing. So they came to the church, and there they tasted – just tasted – of the heavenly gift of salvation and became partakers of the Holy Spirit. Partaking in something is far different from being really part of it. I might partake of a lively conversation, by simply listening in without adding anything of my own. Am I really part of that conversation?

So these new church members, rather than surrendering to the Holy Spirit and being filled with Him, simply sipped His presence from the mature believers around them. They were enlightened by Gospel truth and tasted of the power of the Kingdom and the age to come, but they weren’t being fed or sustained on any of this. If they were, if the Spirit of God had truly wrought salvation in their souls, then the evidence would have been visible in good works of love, increased faith in God, a hunger to know more of His promises, and diligence in seeking more of the salvation of the Lord (vv. 9-12).

In the Christian life, seeing is believing, because true faith, the faith of those who follow Jesus, is both an inward assurance of the things we hope for, and the outward evidence that those things provide the guiding focus and driving force for our lives (Heb. 11.1).

Peter said as much as well. He exhorted his readers to give all diligence to make sure – to confirm for themselves and others – that God had really saved them. In order to do this, they had to work hard at repentance and Christian growth, and not just be content to dabble in basic teaching or hang out with the redeemed (2 Pet. 1.5-11). 

What shall we take from this? Simply this: While the milk of God’s Word is just that – basic, fundamental, elementary teachings that anyone who would follow Jesus must embrace – we cannot be sure that we have embraced those teachings until our tasting and partaking become a hunger and thirst for the Word of God, a passion for good works, and a determination to know more of everything God has to teach and intends to do through us.

Not by works, but unto them
We need solid food. Milk won’t sustain us. We’ll never move on to maturity in following Jesus if we refuse to get off the bottle and get on the meaty cuisine. Because only solid food is sufficient to equip us for our calling as teachers of others. And those who just don’t seem to have the appetite for solid Biblical teaching need to examine themselves to make sure they’re really the followers of Christ they claim to be.

This is not salvation by works; it is salvation resulting in works (Eph. 2.8-10). And unless our claims to believe in salvation and to want to follow Jesus begin leading to appropriate works, we’d better revisit the basics until we learn them enough to begin living them consistently.

For if we fall away from the milk, we’ll never get on to maturity, never be able to fulfill our calling to teach, never follow Jesus as He intends, and we may even find ourselves disappointed and dismayed when, on that last great day, we stand before the Lord of glory Himself, only to hear Him say, “I never knew you.”

For reflection
1.  Is it really possible for someone to be enlightened, to taste, and to partake of the things of Christ, and yet not truly know the Lord? Explain.

2.  Meditate on Hebrews 11.1. How would you describe the inward experience of true faith? What are some aspects of the outward evidence such faith spawns?

3.  Is moving on in faith something a follower of Jesus does because of a sense of duty or because of love? Explain.

Next steps – Demonstration: What should you be looking for in your own walk with the Lord as evidence that your faith is helping you to follow Jesus more consistently? Talk with a fellow believer about this question.

T. M. Moore

This week’s study, You Ought to Be Teachers!, is Part 2 of a 5-part series on Following Jesus.Each week’s study is available in a free PDF which you can download by clicking here. Watch the video on our Mission Partners Outreach for more information about how you can begin to follow Jesus in your Personal Mission Field (click here).

Want to learn more about your Christian worldview? Our free online course, One in Twelve, is available any time, and at no charge. Click here to learn more about this helpful and challenging introduction to Christian worldview, presented by T. M. Moore.

The Lord uses your prayers and gifts to help us in this ministry. Add us to your regular prayer list, and seek the Lord concerning whether He would have you share with us. You can contribute to The Fellowship of Ailbe by using the contribute button at the website, or send your gift to The Fellowship of Ailbe, 19 Tyler Drive, Essex Junction, VT 05452.

Except as indicated, Scripture taken from the New King James Version. © Copyright 1982 by Thomas Nelson, Inc. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

T.M. Moore

T. M. Moore is principal of The Fellowship of Ailbe, a spiritual fellowship in the Celtic Christian tradition. He and his wife, Susie, make their home in the Champlain Valley of Vermont.
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