NT Text: Hebrews 11:32
OT Source(s):
Source: Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Reference Type: Allusion
Connection Method(s): Typology
Significance: In its roll call of faith Hebrews has no time "to tell of Gideon, Barak, Samson, Jephthah, David, Samuel, and the prophets" (Heb 11:32), naming Barak among those who "through faith conquered kingdoms... became mighty in battle, and put foreign armies to flight" (11:33-34). The reference reaches back to Judges 4-5, where Barak, summoned by Deborah's prophetic word, leads Israel against Sisera's host and is celebrated in the victory song. The connection is best read as analogy carried by the Deliverer/Divine-Warrior pattern more than strict person-to-person typology: Barak is one of the "flawed deliverers" of Judges, and his faith — acting on the prophetic word despite his hesitation (he would go only if Deborah went, Judg 4:8) — is precisely what Hebrews commends. The escalation is corporate and redemptive-historical: these stammering, partial saviors who win temporary rest by faith all point beyond themselves to the great Deliverer and "author and perfecter of our faith" (12:2), in whom the cycle of failed judges is resolved. Hebrews' pastoral aim is the deletion-test telos: such faith is desirable and imitable because the same God who answered Barak's imperfect trust now stands as the unfailing object of ours, drawing the weary to keep running the race by fixing their eyes on Jesus.