Introduction
In this session, Hebrews chapter 11: 32-40, we focus on understanding the impossible things the mentioned people did just because they trusted God and how God honored their faith. The session also focused on understanding the severe persecutions the believers endured just because they trusted God
Objectives
By the end of this session, the learner will have:
- Understood how faith (the Kingdom currency) works by listing how heroes of old used it and how God rewarded them.
- Appreciated that faith is not Knowing what is in the shop BUT knowing who the shopkeeper is.
- Challenged to obey God step by step by knowing that the reward is in obeying the previous promise
- Understood that God only respond to the currency of Faith by examining the examples given.
Outline
- Impossible things people of faith did
- The reward for faith
- Delayed rewards for people of faith
- Persecution for the people of faith
Group Study Time
Hebrews 11: 32-40
Connecting
- Gather with two or more people for a community discovery bible study session.
- Start with a heartfelt prayer, inviting God to guide and bless your understanding.
- Explore the passage by reading it at least twice, using different Bible versions if available, then retell the story together as a group.
- Reflect and share the challenges and blessings you experienced from the previous study.
Comprehending
- Read Hebrews 11: 32-35a. What 5 impossible things did the mentioned people do just because they trusted God? How did God honour their faith?
- Read Hebrews 11: 35b-38. List 5 severe persecutions the believers endured just because they trusted God.
- Read Hebrews 11: 39-40. What truths do you discover about men and women of faith? Why did they not receive what God had promised?
Committing
- Engage with the Bible—read, study, memorize, meditate, pray, listen, and live it out.
- List three lessons you have learnt as an agent of change that you would like to put into practice and teach others about.
- Take time and worship Jesus with the attributes revealed about Christ.
- Use the SPACEPETS model, to assist you in putting God’s word into practice. Look for:
- Sin to confess
- Promise to claim
- Attitude to change
- Command to keep
- Error to change
- Prayer to make
- Example to copy
- Truth to obey and
- Something praiseworthy
Communicating
- Identify one person you can connect with and share the valuable insights and lessons you gained from this session.
- Reach out to a new believer—either in person or by phone—and pray with them to support them through their challenges, including any concerns about attending church.
- Create a new group and guide others through this study to help them grow in their understanding.
Post Lesson Teaching Summary
Great job completing the study! Take a moment to listen to this summary to reinforce your group’s understanding of the text and ensure you’re all on the same page. We’re here to support your learning journey!
What men and women of faith did
Hebrews 11: 32-40
Audio Summary
Hebrews 11:32-40
Context
- Concluding the hall of faith examples, the author calls more witnesses to encourage believers tempted to revert to ancestral worship, showing faith as trusting God’s promises because He is faithful, even if fulfillment is unseen or delayed.
- These heroes lived and died by faith without receiving full promises (e.g., Messiah’s coming, fulfillment of Genesis 3), but God prepared a better city for them; we are perfected together with them.
Faith’s Victories and Sufferings (Hebrews 11:32-40)
- More Heroes of Faith: Gideon, Barak, Samson, Jephthah, David, Samuel, and prophets—ordinary people who trusted God’s word and acted on it.
- Faith’s Triumphs: By faith conquered kingdoms, administered justice, gained promises, shut lions’ mouths (Daniel), quenched fire’s power (Shadrach, Meshach, Abednego), escaped sword’s edge, turned weakness to strength, became powerful in battle, routed foreign armies; women received back dead raised to life (widow of Zarephath with Elijah, Shunammite with Elisha).
- Faith’s Sufferings: Others tortured, refused release for better resurrection; jeered, flogged, chained, imprisoned, stoned, sawed in two (Isaiah tradition), killed by sword; wandered in deserts/mountains/caves, in sheep/goat skins, destitute, persecuted, mistreated—world unworthy of them.
- Commended Yet Unfulfilled: All commended for faith but didn’t receive promise; God planned better—something involving us—so they not perfected without us; waited for Messiah’s coming, suffering, death, resurrection, ascension, and final battle (Revelation).
- Examples of Waiting: Like Simeon and Anna in temple, waiting for Israel’s consolation; Simeon saw Jesus and praised God, ready to die having seen salvation.
- Purpose: These witnesses prove faith pleases God eternally; live/die trusting promises, as God is not ashamed to be their God and has prepared a city—don’t turn back.
Application
- Live by faith like these heroes, trusting God’s faithful word amid triumphs or sufferings; we see more (Jesus’ first coming) but still wait for His return—persevere without reverting to old ways.