The Letter to the Hebrews: An Eight-Week bible Study
By Ken Schenck
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About this ebook
Hebrews is one of the most perplexing books in the New Testament. The audience is in the middle of a faith crisis. Fatigued from years of living for Christ in an unfriendly and often hostile world, they do not fully understand the significance of Jesus’ death and are worried about where they are going to get atonement for their sins. In this time of distress, the unknown author of Hebrews sends a sermon. The sermon of Hebrews is a reassurance that the Jewish system of sacrifices is no longer required, for Jesus has provided the sacrifice to end all sacrifices. The author issues a stern warning: there must be endurance in order to be part of the unshakeable kingdom. In heaven is a cloud of witnesses urging all of us on to the finish line. We must press on.
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The Letter to the Hebrews - Ken Schenck
INTRODUCTION
The letter to the Hebrews has two main points. It has a main teaching point; namely, that the offering of Jesus on the cross has forever taken care of our sins. No other sacrifice is required. We need no priest but Christ to reconcile us to God. Atonement is accomplished. By God’s grace, salvation is ready and available for us to sign up for at any time.
The other main point is the implication of atonement. The audience needs to continue in faithfulness. They have no reason to doubt the truth of the message they have heard. They must not give up. They have every reason to cross the finish line and, indeed, the consequences would be dire if they do not.
We do not know many other aspects of Hebrews for certain, but these basic truths are clear enough. These two points hold true no matter what the specifics of the audience’s situation. Did Hebrews warn its audience not to rely on the temple? Or did Hebrews console them after the temple was already destroyed? Either way, the point is that we need no further means of atonement. Jesus is all we need. Was the audience tempted to fall back into Judaism? Or was a group of Gentile believers having second thoughts about the God of Israel? Either way, the message to endure remains.
WEEK ONE
Hebrews 1:1–12
Celebrating Jesus
INTRODUCTION
The book of Hebrews is in many ways one of the most puzzling books in the New Testament. We do not know who wrote it, and we are unsure of the church to which it was written. Experts on the book disagree on when it was written and whether its recipients were primarily Jewish or non-Jewish. Many think that its first twelve chapters were meant to be read as a sermon to a congregation the author hoped to visit in the near future.
The first chapter begins majestically, with an almost hymn-like contrast of Christ with the angels. Next to God himself, surely angels are the most exalted of God’s creations. Yet next to Christ, they are nothing. They are only servants in the kingdom of the universe. To show the glory of the age that Christ is inaugurating, Hebrews 1 shows us how much more glorious Jesus is than the angels, the stewards of the age that is now passing away.
ONE
A Definitive Word
Hebrews 1:1–2 NRSV Long ago God spoke to our ancestors in many and various ways by the prophets, ²but in these last days he has spoken to us by a Son, whom he appointed heir of all things, through whom he also created the worlds.
Key Observation. From the very moment God started to create to the moment that Christ will bring his eternal kingdom, Jesus is God’s last Word for the universe.
Understanding the Word. The first two verses of Hebrews present a contrast. In the past, God spoke to his people in many different ways. He spoke to his people through human prophets in Israel. He spoke to them through angels. He led them through the wilderness with a pillar of fire and a wandering cloud.
In days recent to the author, God had inaugurated a new Word: Jesus. He is not just one of many but the one Word. This final Word was the Son of God, the King to restore the rule of God on earth as it is in heaven. For centuries Israel had been without a king. They had hoped for God to give them full control of their land back.
In Jesus, they received a King greater than they could have possibly imagined. They received a people that was much bigger than those who had Jewish blood. They became part of a kingdom that was not only bigger than the land of Israel, not only bigger than the Roman Empire, but a kingdom that consisted of the whole universe, of all things both seen and unseen. The previous ways that God had spoken were many and various.
Now God had spoken a singular, final Word in Jesus.
Jesus the Son spans the whole of history. On the one hand, he is the heir of all things.
Everything that exists in the creation will be his when the kingdom fully comes. God has bequeathed it to him as his Son. In 1 Corinthians 15:26–27, we learn that God has destined everything in this world to be put under Christ’s feet, including death. So when Hebrews says that Jesus is the heir of everything, it truly means that Christ will rule over everything that God has made.
Then we learn that Jesus was actually at the beginning of the creation as well. This Son who is heir of everything was also the One through whom God created the worlds. Christians have long taken this statement to mean that Jesus must have existed before he came to earth as Christ. In fact, we believe that Jesus is God. In some mysterious way, even though there is only one God, God exists as three persons—Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
Hebrews 1:2 tells us that Christ was the agent of creation. Some Jewish writings from the time of the New Testament speak of God creating the world by means of his wisdom. An Old Testament example of this way of thinking is Proverbs 8:22–31, where God’s wisdom is pictured at his side helping him create the world. Might the author of Hebrews have been hinting to this congregation that Jesus was God’s wisdom for the world, the One who gives meaning to everything? Jesus is the Word God spoke to heal the world.
So begins this majestic sermon. Jesus is at the beginning and end of history. Jesus is God’s last Word for the universe. We know that we are about to hear God’s answer to all the world’s questions and problems. We are about to know the secret to the universe from the beginning to the end of time. That answer and that secret is Jesus Christ.
Have you ever pondered the awesomeness of Christ? How great is this One who spans time from eternity past to eternity future! Are you living with an awe proper to his greatness?
How different would your community of faith look if Jesus were truly King? What is God calling you to do to make any needed changes?
Since Jesus is, in fact, God’s wisdom for the universe, should we not share that wisdom with as many people as we can? Are you excited to let God’s wisdom speak to everyone and every part of your own life?
TWO
The Image of God
Hebrews 1:3–4 The Son is the radiance of God’s glory and the exact representation of his being, sustaining all things by his powerful word. After he had provided purification for sins, he sat down at the right hand of the Majesty in heaven. ⁴So he became as much superior to the angels as the name he has inherited is superior to theirs.
Key Observation. If you want to know what God is like, look at Jesus. Jesus is a perfect reflection of who God is and the One who will make the universe what it is supposed to be again.
Understanding the Word. There are some books that we do not consider Scripture today that were nevertheless of great value to the earliest Christians. The author of Hebrews seems to draw on one of them in verse 3. The Book of Wisdom
said something very similar to this verse when it was talking about God’s wisdom. In this book, God’s wisdom is said to be the radiance of God’s eternal light and an image of his goodness.
The author’s point seems to be that if you want to know how wise God is, look at Jesus. Do you want to know what God is like? Look at Jesus. If you want to understand God’s plan for the world, pay attention to Jesus. In Jesus, we find a mirror of God the Father. God is glorious. He is so full of glory that we would not be able to look at him if he appeared to us. Jesus radiates and reflects that glory.
In some way, Jesus sustains all things. As Colossians 1:17 says, he holds everything together. Sin has put the whole universe off-line. It is not working as it should. In Jesus, God is hitting the Reset button on the world. Everything will work right once Jesus’ salvation is fully in place. He is the solution to hold together everything that is falling apart.
Jesus is the glue that can reattach us to God. All have sinned and are lacking the glory of God (Rom. 3:23). We are separated from God. But Jesus is the One who can reconcile us to our Father and Creator.
This work is done, although it is not yet fully enacted. Jesus’ death has paid for the work. He has taken a seat because the purification is accomplished. God, the greatest Majesty there is, has enthroned him and installed him as King of the cosmos. Christ became lower than the angels for a little while (Heb. 2:7), but now that the work is done, God has exalted him far above any angel. He is now enthroned far above all principalities and powers (e.g., Col. 1:16).
What is the name he has inherited? The next verse will prompt us to think Hebrews is talking about the name of a son. While we often think of a name in terms of a person’s name, it probably refers to Jesus receiving the title of Son of God.
Tomorrow we will explore what this title Son
probably means in Hebrews.
What we see clearly in this rich collection of statements about Christ is how exalted he truly is. He shows us who God is. He shows us the very essence of what the universe is meant to be about. He has, in one faithful act, forever reconciled us to God. He made a purification for the sins of the world and then sat down because the work was done. We now only await his return for everything to be finally restored.
The angels are still helping us, but their role as ministers of the creation is coming to an end. Before long, the King who is not seen will be seen, and every knee will bow before Jesus Christ our Lord.
Although Jesus uniquely