Hébreux 11:14

14 Car ceux qui parlent ainsi, montrent clairement qu'ils cherchent une patrie.

Hébreux 11:14 Meaning and Commentary

Hebrews 11:14

For they that say such things
That they are strangers and pilgrims on earth:

declare plainly that they seek a country;
heaven, so called, for the largeness of it; it is a good land, a land of uprightness; a pleasant land, a land of rest, though a land afar off; here the Father of Christ, and Christ himself, and all his people dwell: the Syriac version renders it, "their own city"; the place of their nativity, of which they were citizens: the act of "seeking" it supposes some things, with respect to the place where they were, as that they were in a strange land, had no settlement there, nor satisfaction in it, and that they sat loose to the world, and the things of it; and some things respecting the country sought after, as that they were not in it; that it was at a distance from them; that they had some knowledge of it, and of the way to it; that their desires were after it, and that they had a strong affection and value for it: the right way to this country is not mere civility and morality, nor legal righteousness, nor birth privileges, nor submission to outward ordinances, nor a mere profession of religion, but the Lord Jesus Christ; he is the true way to eternal life; it is his righteousness which gives a title to it, and on account of which believers expect it, though not without holiness, nor without trouble. The right manner of seeking it is, in the first place, above all things else, with the whole heart, by faith, and by patient continuance in well doing. Many are the reasons which may induce believers to seek it; it is their own, and their Father's country; it is a better one than that in which they are; and because of the company they shall there enjoy, and the work they shall be employed in; and because of the happiness they will be possessed of; and because their inheritance, riches, and treasures, lie here.

Hébreux 11:14 In-Context

12 C'est pourquoi d'un seul homme, et qui était déjà affaibli, il est né une multitude aussi nombreuse que les étoiles du ciel, et que le sable du bord de la mer, qui ne se peut compter.
13 Tous ceux-là sont morts dans la foi, sans avoir reçu les choses promises, mais les ayant vues de loin, crues, et embrassées, et ayant fait profession d'être étrangers et voyageurs sur la terre.
14 Car ceux qui parlent ainsi, montrent clairement qu'ils cherchent une patrie.
15 En effet, s'ils se fussent souvenus de celle d'où ils étaient sortis, ils auraient eu le temps d'y retourner;
16 Mais maintenant ils en désirent une meilleure, c'est-à-dire une céleste; c'est pourquoi Dieu ne dédaigne pas d'être appelé leur Dieu; car il leur a préparé une cité.
The Ostervald translation is in the public domain.