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Hebrews 12:1  (Young's Literal Translation)
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Hebrews 12:1

There are seven days of Unleavened Bread but only one day of Passover, Pentecost, Trumpets, and Atonement. God knows that we tend to change slowly. He gives us seven days each year to concentrate on our duty to rid our lives of sin. Those acts that are God's responsibility—the sacrifice of one for all sin, the sending of His Spirit, the resurrection of the dead, or the binding of Satan—He can accomplish in one day. The part that involves mankind's participation—overcoming sin—requires more time and attention. The Days of Unleavened Bread represent a period of judgment when man is required to overcome. To us, overcoming a deep-seated sin can seem to take an eternity! The obvious lesson is that we must draw much nearer to the Source of the power to overcome.

Staff
Holy Days: Unleavened Bread

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Hebrews 12:1-4

We can learn a great deal about why patience is so vital by comparing the process we are going through to an artist sculpting a work from a piece of marble. Chip by chip over a period of time, an artist uses hammer and chisel to shape a conception from a raw slab of rock until the finished figure is revealed. God is doing much the same with us except we are living, raw material with mind, emotions, and the liberty to allow or disallow the Artist to continue. If we are impatient, not allowing the Creator to complete His artistry by our constant yielding to His tools, we will never be perfect and entire.

It is easy for us to magnify our burdens. Notice, however, what grumbling did for the Israelites in the wilderness when God finally responded. Would we rather have our trial or grumble and receive what the Israelites did? We must begin to cultivate the habit of thinking of life, including all of its trials, as being God's way to shape godly character in us.

James makes what seems to be a paradoxical statement in James 1:2: We should count our various trials as joy. Why? Because verse 3 says that doing so produces patience! We need patience so God can mold us into His likeness. Even God cannot produce godly character by fiat. James is teaching us that we should not measure the experiences of life by their ability to please our ambition or tastes but by their capacity to make us into God's image. If we have any vision—and a zealous desire to live as God does—we can welcome our trials as steps in God's creative process and meet them with patience and hope.

Perfection in this life is to become what God wants us to become. What could be better than that? If we understand that our lives are in God's hands as He molds and shapes us, then the meanings—the eventual outcome—of joy and sorrow are the same. God intends the same result whether He gives or takes. The events of life are merely the scaffolding for shaping us into His image, and we should meet them with patience as He continues His work. This will work to flatten out the emotional extremes we tend to experience.

John W. Ritenbaugh
The Fruit of the Spirit: Patience



Library resources that contain this verse:

Articles

Contend Earnestly  

Discouraged? Why?  

Joy and Trial  

Rivet Your Eyes on the Destination  

The Crown of Life  

The Fruit of the Spirit: Patience  

The Weightier Matters (Part 4) : Faith and Fidelity  

Will You Marry Me? (Part Two)  

Booklets

Guard the Truth!  

Sermon Transcripts

A Christian's Greatest Trial  

All His Ways Are Just  

Built as a Witness  

Change and Hope  

Christ Our Standard  

Faith and the Christian Fight (Part 1)  (2)

Grace, Unleavened Bread, and the Holy Spirit  

Knowing Christ (Part 4)  

Maintaining Good Health (Part 13)  

On Works  

Passover and Hope  

Patiently Waiting for Christ's Return  

Principled Living (Part 7): Enduring to the End  

Re-education (Part 2)  

The Church Family—Convinced and Persuaded  

The Importance of God's Right Hand in Coming Out of Sin  

Why Count Fifty Days?  


 
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