The sermon emphasizes the importance of the new covenant and Jesus' role as high priest, highlighting the consequences of drifting away from the truth and the benefits of spiritual adoption and sanctification.
David Servant emphasizes the author's concern for Hebrew Christian readers not to drift away from the truth about Jesus, highlighting the dire consequences of ignoring God's new covenant revealed through His Son. The author underscores Jesus' incarnation, sufferings, and subsequent exaltation, emphasizing His role as the perfect substitute and Savior who brings many to glory. Jesus became a man to render Satan powerless through His death, freeing believers from spiritual death and Satan's dominion, serving as a compassionate high priest who understands and aids those who are tempted.
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Today we are introduced to the author's primary concern for his Hebrew Christian readers. He did not want them to "drift away" (2:1) from the truth they had embraced about Jesus. So he returns to his comparison of the old and new covenants, endorsing both but emphasizing the superiority of the latter, reminding his readers that the consequences were dire for those who ignored God's old covenant revelation delivered by angels. Thus how much more true would that be for those who ignored God's new covenant revelation delivered by His own Son, to whom, unlike angels, He has exalted to rule "the world to come" (2:5-8)? To stress its importance, God confirmed that same message through apostles anointed with signs and wonders (2:3-4). It was not meant to be ignored!
The author again appeals to old covenant scripture to make his new covenant point, citing Psalm 8, where David spoke prophetically of Christ's incarnation, a time when He was made "a little lower than the angels" and of His subsequent exaltation and still-future reign over the world. He declares that Jesus "tasted death for everyone" (2:9). (I'm sure you noticed that he wrote, "everyone," and not "the alleged pre-selected few," so I won't mention it!)
When the author writes that Jesus was perfected through sufferings, he does not mean that Jesus had any need to become morally perfect, but that He became the perfect substitute and Savior through His sufferings. It was by that act that He met the requirements of God's justice. His sufferings and death were credited to our account, and the end result will be His "bringing many sons to glory" (2:10). Now we have become members of His family, and we share His Father! He not only provided our forgiveness, but He now works in us to sanctify us (2:11). We're spiritual brothers of the Son of God (2:11-13)! No wonder the author refers to all of this as "so great a salvation" (2:3). It is amazingly, incredibly wonderful. To drift away from it would be criminal.
What was one of the reasons that Jesus became a man? "Since then the children [that is, we who believe] share in flesh and blood [we have physical bodies], He Himself likewise also partook of the same [a physical body], that through death He might render powerless him who had the power of death, that is, the devil" (2:14). In order to render Satan powerless by His death, Jesus had to have a physical body that could die, because God can't die.
How has Satan been rendered powerless over us by Jesus' death? Satan has the God-given right to rule all those who are not submitted to God. He serves as a subordinate instrument of God's wrath upon rebels. By Jesus' death for our sins, however, we've been set free from God's wrath and thus also from Satan's power, which the author refers to as "the power of death" (2:14). The spiritual death that resides within every unsaved person is Satan's very nature (see Eph. 2:2). We could almost say that anyone who is not born again is mildly devil-possessed, but when he believes in Jesus he undergoes an immediate exorcism. Satan's nature is eradicated from his inner man!
Another reason that the Son of God became a man was so He could become our high priest (2:17). The Hebrew Christians could certainly understand that analogy, because it was only through the mediation of the high priest and the blood sacrifice that their sins could be covered under the old covenant. It was through the sacrifice of Himself that Jesus made "propitiation for the sins of the people" (2:17). To propitiate means to "turn away wrath," and that's what Jesus did for us. He turned away God's righteous wrath by bearing the penalty we deserved.
Jesus is a compassionate high priest, because He knows from experience what it's like to be tempted as a human being, and "He is able to come to the aid of those who are tempted" (2:18). To the persecuted Hebrew Christians who were being tempted to drift away from Christ and revert to Judaism, that would have been especially encouraging news.
Sermon Outline
- The Author's Concern for the Hebrew Christians
- The Superiority of the New Covenant
- The Role of Jesus as High Priest
- Jesus' sacrifice as propitiation for the sins of the people
- Jesus' compassion as a high priest who knows temptation
Key Quotes
“So great a salvation” — David Servant
“He Himself likewise also partook of the same [a physical body], that through death He might render powerless him who had the power of death, that is, the devil” — David Servant
“He is able to come to the aid of those who are tempted” — David Servant
Application Points
- We must not drift away from the truth about Jesus and the new covenant.
- Jesus' sacrifice has brought us spiritual adoption and sanctification, and we must respond to this gift by living for Him.
- We can find comfort in knowing that Jesus is a compassionate high priest who knows from experience what it's like to be tempted and is able to come to our aid.
