Hebrews 11 is called the “Faith Hall of Fame.” The chapter
begins with the classic definition of faith and then walks us down the hallway
of fame with vignettes about some of the great heroes of faith displayed like
portraits on the wall. Abel, Enoch, Noah, Abraham, Sarah and others are all
beautifully pictured and briefly sketched in a sentence or two that capture
their acts of obedience and walk of faith.
Verse 21 has arrested me; it reads, “By faith Jacob, when he was
dying, blessed each of the sons of Joseph, and worshiped, leaning on the top of
his staff” (NKJV).
At first reading this hardly seems the kind of act to be
included with Noah “building an ark,” Abraham “going out not knowing where he
was going,” or Moses “leading the children of Israel through the Red Sea.” But
there it is—in the midst of the “Hall of Fame” with all the others.
By the time Jacob’s life was at an end, his natural eyesight
was gone but his “faith sight” was crystal clear. When Joseph brought his sons
in for his father Jacob to bless, Joseph carefully arranged them so that
Jacob’s right hand (signifying the greater anointing and blessing) would be
upon his firstborn and Jacob’s left hand would be on the son born second. By
the “eye of faith” Jacob knew that the second-born son was to be used by God in
a greater way than his brother and so, even though blind, he crossed his hands
and laid his right hand on the second born and the left on his older brother.
Both grandsons were blessed but not in the order that tradition dictated.
The Scripture says that after blessing his grandsons, Jacob leaned
on his staff and worshiped. This is a difficult phrase to translate from the
original. It probably does not mean that Jacob literally stood up, leaned on
his walking stick and worshiped. More likely it means that he lay back on his
bed and worshiped but, frankly, exactly how it happened is immaterial. What is
really important to understand is that Jacob valued his relationship with God
so strongly that he went from this life into eternity worshiping. The last act
of a dying man was to worship his God!
What does this say to us about the value of worship?
Authentic worship is not about us, it is all about Him. Authentic worship is an
act of faith, not a declaration of war, not an assertion of rights, not a
condemnation of the devil but an act of faith as we express praise and
adoration to God. Trite little songs and poems about dancing and jumping, about
exercising our dominion and our rights, are hardly worship; at best they are
expressions of pleasure and joy in serving Jesus. Authentic worship is not a
performance; instead, it is a humble and unrestrained act of adoration of the
Creator. Real worship is totally focused on Him and has nothing at all to do
with me or you or anyone else!
What does it say to us that the final act of a dying man is
worship? I believe this act of faith shows us how deeply Jacob valued his
relationship with God. He had gone through some very serious challenges in his
life and had seen God provide for him and his family in miraculous ways.
Jacob knew the pain of being lied to by his sons after they
had conspired to kill their brother Joseph. Jacob knew the terrifying pain of
believing that he had lost one son only to find out that another had been taken
hostage by the Egyptians. Jacob thought Joseph was dead, but he later saw God’s
magnificent, sovereign plan being unfolded by Joseph’s advance entrance into
Egypt.
Jacob had seen the extremes of life: the lowest of lows and
the highest of highs. He easily could have chosen to finish life as a cynical
and beaten man, but instead he chose to finish his life in an act of faith, an
act of worship. Maybe Jacob, in an act of faith, one more time slowly pushed himself
up from his bed, and one last time took up his walking stick. Slowly, so
slowly, Jacob pushed himself upright in defiance of his age and infirmity and,
using his staff for balance, began to magnify the Lord
with the verbal sacrifice of praise and worship. I can almost hear the tired
voice of Jacob as he begins to worship and give praise to the Almighty!
I like that imagery—it is a picture that belongs in the “Faith
Hall of Fame.” May we all learn to walk by faith as worshipers of El
Shaddai/The Almighty!
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