| Chapter 12 |
1 |
Therefore, we also having so great a cloud of witnesses set around us, every weight having put off, and the closely besetting sin, through endurance may we run the contest that is set before us, |
2 |
looking to the author and perfecter of faith -- Jesus, who, over-against the joy set before him -- did endure a cross, shame having despised, on the right hand also of the throne of God did sit down; |
3 |
for consider again him who endured such gainsaying from the sinners to himself, that ye may not be wearied in your souls -- being faint. |
4 |
Not yet unto blood did ye resist -- with the sin striving; |
5 |
and ye have forgotten the exhortation that doth speak fully with you as with sons, `My son, be not despising chastening of the Lord, nor be faint, being reproved by Him, |
6 |
for whom the Lord doth love He doth chasten, and He scourgeth every son whom He receiveth;` |
7 |
if chastening ye endure, as to sons God beareth Himself to you, for who is a son whom a father doth not chasten? |
8 |
and if ye are apart from chastening, of which all have become partakers, then bastards are ye, and not sons. |
9 |
Then, indeed, fathers of our flesh we have had, chastising us, and we were reverencing them; shall we not much rather be subject to the Father of the spirits, and live? |
10 |
for they, indeed, for a few days, according to what seemed good to them, were chastening, but He for profit, to be partakers of His separation; |
11 |
and all chastening for the present, indeed, doth not seem to be of joy, but of sorrow, yet afterward the peaceable fruit of righteousness to those exercised through it -- it doth yield. |
12 |
Wherefore, the hanging-down hands and the loosened knees set ye up; |
13 |
and straight paths make for your feet, that that which is lame may not be turned aside, but rather be healed; |
14 |
peace pursue with all, and the separation, apart from which no one shall see the Lord, |
15 |
looking diligently over lest any one be failing of the grace of God, lest any root of bitterness springing up may give trouble, and through this many may be defiled; |
16 |
lest any one be a fornicator, or a profane person, as Esau, who in exchange for one morsel of food did sell his birthright, |
17 |
for ye know that also afterwards, wishing to inherit the blessing, he was disapproved of, for a place of reformation he found not, though with tears having sought it. |
18 |
For ye came not near to the mount touched and scorched with fire, and to blackness, and darkness, and tempest, |
19 |
and a sound of a trumpet, and a voice of sayings, which those having heard did entreat that a word might not be added to them, |
20 |
for they were not bearing that which is commanded, `And if a beast may touch the mountain, it shall be stoned, or with an arrow shot through,` |
21 |
and, (so terrible was the sight,) Moses said, `I am fearful exceedingly, and trembling.` |
22 |
But, ye came to Mount Zion, and to a city of the living God, to the heavenly Jerusalem, and to myriads of messengers, |
23 |
to the company and assembly of the first-born in heaven enrolled, and to God the judge of all, and to spirits of righteous men made perfect, |
24 |
and to a mediator of a new covenant -- Jesus, and to blood of sprinkling, speaking better things than that of Abel! |
25 |
See, may ye not refuse him who is speaking, for if those did not escape who refused him who upon earth was divinely speaking -- much less we who do turn away from him who speaketh from heaven, |
26 |
whose voice the earth shook then, and now hath he promised, saying, `Yet once -- I shake not only the earth, but also the heaven;` |
27 |
and this -- `Yet once` -- doth make evident the removal of the things shaken, as of things having been made, that the things not shaken may remain; |
28 |
wherefore, a kingdom that cannot be shaken receiving, may we have grace, through which we may serve God well-pleasingly, with reverence and religious fear; |
29 |
for also our God is a consuming fire. |