Verse explainer
The 'cloud of witnesses' aren't spectators cheering from heaven — they're the parade of faith-veterans whose recorded lives testify that endurance is possible.
Wherefore seeing we also are compassed about with so great a cloud of witnesses, let us lay aside every weight, and the sin which doth so easily beset us, and let us run with patience the race that is set before us,
BSBTherefore, since we are surrounded by such a great cloud of witnesses, let us throw off every encumbrance and the sin that so easily entangles, and let us run with endurance the race set out for us.
The plain meaning
The 'wherefore' ties this verse directly to chapter 11, the long roster of Old Testament figures who trusted God through impossible circumstances. The 'cloud of witnesses' (Greek: nephos martyron) are those same people — their lives bear witness that faith holds. The image is less a stadium full of watching saints and more a dense, surrounding testimony that the path ahead has been walked before. From that grounding, the verse issues two commands and one call. First, strip off 'every weight' — the encumbrances of worldly anxiety, misplaced attachment, or (for the original Hebrew audience) the drag of obsolete ceremonial observance. Second, put off 'the sin which doth so easily beset us' — the word for 'easily beset' (euperistatos) carries the sense of something that stands well-positioned around you, hemming you in on all sides. Third, run with patience — the Greek is hupomone, 'patient endurance under pressure,' not passive waiting. The race is already marked out; the course isn't chosen, the prize isn't negotiable. What is required is to keep moving.
The common misreading
What the commentators say
Clarke draws on Greek athletic parallels: just as Olympic competitors threw aside every garment that could impede their stride, Christians must strip whatever pulls heart and affection toward earth. He reads euperistatos — the 'easily besetting sin' — as the sin most favored by one's circumstances, constitution, and surroundings, always present and always soliciting: not a general warning but a pointed one aimed at each person's particular point of weakness.
Henry separates the verse into two movements: preparatory (laying aside weights and the besetting sin) and perfective (running with patience). He identifies the 'weight' specifically as inordinate care for present life — a dead weight pulling the soul down and back — and names the besetting sin of the Hebrew audience as over-attachment to their own religious dispensation. The race, he notes, covers both active service and passive suffering, and both require the same patient endurance.
Gill emphasizes that the witnesses 'compass about on every side,' making them instructive in every direction — their example leaves no angle uncovered. He reads the 'weight' as including the rites and ceremonies of the Mosaic law, a burden especially apt for the Hebrew recipients of the letter, and suggests the besetting sin is most naturally unbelief, since faith was the very grace the preceding chapter had been commending and unbelief so readily insinuates itself as a virtue.
The word behind it
'Endurance' or 'patient continuance under pressure.' Not passive resignation — the root (menō, 'to remain') plus the prefix hypo ('under') pictures someone holding their position beneath a heavy load and continuing to move. Thayer's distinguishes it from patience in waiting: it is the steadfastness that keeps running when stopping would be easier. The race image requires motion; hypomonē is what sustains that motion when the course turns hard.
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