Hebrews 11:23-29

Faith's Treasures: Reproach Over Riches, God's Reward Over Egypt's Glory

Faith values eternal reward over temporary privilege and endures by trusting the unseen God.

Scripture Text

11:23 By faith Moses’ parents hid him for three months after his birth, because they saw that he was a beautiful child, and they were unafraid of the king’s edict.

11:24 By faith Moses, when he was grown, refused to be called the son of Pharaoh’s daughter.

11:25 He chose to suffer oppression with God’s people rather than to experience the fleeting enjoyment of sin.

11:26 He valued disgrace for Christ above the treasures of Egypt, for he was looking ahead to his reward.

11:27 By faith Moses left Egypt, not fearing the king’s anger; he persevered because he saw Him who is invisible.

11:28 By faith he kept the Passover and the sprinkling of blood, so that the destroyer of the firstborn would not touch Israel’s own firstborn.

11:29 By faith the people passed through the Red Sea as on dry land; but when the Egyptians tried to follow, they were drowned.

Anchor

Faith values eternal reward over temporary privilege and endures by trusting the unseen God.

Moses chose reproach with God's people over Egypt's treasures because he trusted in eternal reward and the unseen God.

Point of Contact

Believers tempted to shrink back must be strengthened by the witness of those who lived and died trusting God's promise before full visible fulfillment.

Rhythm

  1. Definition and foundation of faith Faith trusts God's unseen realities and receives God's word about creation.
  2. Faith from Abel to Noah Early faith worships, pleases God, fears God's warning, and acts before visible fulfillment.
  3. Patriarchal faith Abraham, Sarah, Isaac, Jacob, and Joseph trust God's promise while living as pilgrims and dying before full possession.
  4. Mosaic faith Moses and his parents choose allegiance to God above fear, privilege, sin, and Egypt's treasures.
  5. Exodus and conquest faith Faith passes through the sea, sees Jericho fall, and receives Rahab into rescue.
  6. Faith's victories and sufferings Faith may conquer and be delivered, but it may also suffer, lose, wander, and die while still trusting God.
  7. Faith awaiting final fulfillment The faithful were commended, yet awaited the better fulfillment God provides in Christ.

Crucial Turning Point

Hebrews 11 defines faith as confident trust in God's promised unseen realities and then displays that faith through the lives of those who obeyed, endured, suffered, and died still looking for God's better fulfillment.

Hebrews 11 argues that the life God commends has always been lived by faith. Faith is not vague optimism or mere religious feeling. It is confidence in God's promised future and conviction concerning unseen realities because God has spoken. This faith worships rightly, pleases God, obeys costly commands, lives as a pilgrim, endures delay, rejects sinful pleasure, identifies with God's people, withstands suffering, and looks beyond death. The chapter strengthens the hearers by showing that their present endurance belongs to the same story of promise-trusting faith that reaches its better fulfillment in Christ.

Theological logic
  1. Hebrews 10 ends by calling believers to live by faith and not shrink back.
  2. Faith is confidence in hoped-for realities and assurance concerning unseen realities.
  3. Faith receives God's word about creation, recognizing that the visible came from God's unseen command.
  4. Faith worships in a way God commends, as Abel shows.
  5. Faith pleases God by believing that he exists and rewards those who seek him, as Enoch shows.
  6. Faith responds to God's warning about unseen judgment, as Noah shows.
  7. Faith obeys God's call without full knowledge of the path, as Abraham shows.
  8. Faith lives as a pilgrim because it seeks God's city, not ultimate settlement in the present world.
  9. Faith trusts God's faithfulness when human impossibility appears overwhelming, as Sarah's conception shows.
  10. Faith can die without receiving the full promise and still see, welcome, and confess the promise from afar.
  11. Faith regards heavenly country and God's prepared city as better than earthly belonging.
  12. Faith trusts God's resurrection power when obedience seems to threaten the promise, as Abraham offering Isaac shows.
  13. Faith blesses future generations and speaks of future exodus even at death.
  14. Faith rejects the treasures, pleasures, and status of Egypt to identify with God's people.
  15. Faith keeps Passover under the shelter of blood and moves forward through danger.
  16. Faith may experience visible victory, deliverance, and power.
  17. Faith may also endure torture, mockery, imprisonment, poverty, wandering, and death.
  18. The faithful were commended but awaited the final promise.
  19. God planned something better so that the old covenant faithful and new covenant believers would be perfected together in Christ.

Watch Out

  • Reading 'the reproach of Christ' as an anachronistic insertion of NT language into OT history. Hebrews deliberately applies this — the author sees all covenant suffering as unified under the one mediator. Affirm the author's hermeneutical move: Moses shared in the same redemptive story whose center is Christ.
  • Treating Moses' refusal of Egypt's pleasures as monasticism or rejection of culture. Moses acted within the world — he made a covenant-identity choice about ultimate allegiance, not a withdrawal from engagement. Frame the choice as one of ultimate loyalty, not cultural rejection.
  • Reading the Passover faith in verse 28 as generic obedience. Moses kept it 'by faith' — the theological weight is on trust in the blood as God's appointed means of atonement. Keep the atoning significance of the blood at the center; the Passover is not merely ritual compliance.
  • Treating Moses' refusal of Egypt's pleasures as monasticism or rejection of culture. Moses acted within the world — he made a covenant-identity choice about ultimate allegiance, not a withdrawal. Frame the choice as one of ultimate loyalty, not cultural rejection.
  • Reading the Passover faith in verse 28 as generic obedience. Moses kept it 'by faith' — the theological weight is on trust in the blood as God's appointed means of atonement. Keep the atoning significance of the blood at the center.

Invitation Arc

Response
  • Receive God's word as more certain than visible circumstances.
  • Obey God's call even when the path is not fully known.
  • Confess pilgrim identity rather than seeking ultimate belonging in the present world.
  • Choose fellowship with God's people above the pleasures and treasures of disobedience.
  • Prepare for faithfulness in both deliverance and suffering.
  • Remember that God's reward may be delayed but is never false.
  • Let the faith of earlier witnesses lead you to fix your eyes on Jesus.
  • Encourage weary believers that dying in faith is not failure when God's promise is sure.

Formation Aim

Persevering faith, pilgrim identity, obedience under uncertainty, courage under suffering, rejection of temporary sin, hope in God's city, and endurance until fulfillment.

Canonical Thread

Gospel Clarity

The Passover blood that delivered Israel points to Christ, whose blood secures eternal salvation for all who trust in Him.