What Does Mature Faith Look Like? (Hebrews 5-6)

What is a spiritually mature Christian? Find four insights from Hebrews on how to become one.

What Does Mature Faith Look Like? (Hebrews 5-6)

Hebrews 5-6

Today's Scripture Passage

A Few Thoughts to Consider

Would you consider yourself a mature Christian?

This is a tough question to answer and many who are quick to say “yes” might just be the least aware of their need for spiritual growth. Thankfully, the book of Hebrews gives us some guidance. The theme of this letter is “Jesus is greater.” The author is addressing a Jewish congregation that struggles to put its beliefs into practice and in Hebrews 5:12-6:2, the author laments:

12 Although by this time you ought to be teachers, you need someone to teach you the basic principles of God’s revelation again. You need milk, not solid food. 13 Now everyone who lives on milk is inexperienced with the message about righteousness, because he is an infant. 14 But solid food is for the mature—for those whose senses have been trained to distinguish between good and evil.
6:1 Therefore, let us leave the elementary teaching about Christ and go on to maturity, not laying again a foundation of repentance from dead works, faith in God, teaching about ritual washings, laying on of hands, the resurrection of the dead, and eternal judgment. And we will do this if God permits.

From this passage, we see four characteristics of baby Christians.

The first is that they are slow to obey. The author of Hebrews uses the word Greek word nothros (or dull) to describe his readers’ current state. This could mean sluggish, dull, dimwit, negligent, or lazy.

Second, baby Christians refuse to move past the basics. By “basic principles” (or stoichia), this also referred to a letter of the alphabet. In other words, the writer is saying, “You still need to learn your ABCs.”

Third, baby Christians suck but do not nourish others. In this letter to the Hebrews, the author is going to cover some deep topics such as the “Priesthood of Christ.” Some of the matters are so complex that many of his readers no doubt scratched their heads in question and amazement. But the reason they would struggle to understand this is because they had been used to a steady diet of milk.

Fourth, they are unskilled in the Word of God. Ultimately, people who are unskilled in the Word of God demonstrate this when they are placed underneath the gun of pressure. Like a house with a firm foundation, the deeper we are rooted in the riches of God, the stronger we will stand in times of adversity.