Ben Brummett

Hebrews 12:18-29 - "Holiness"

A sense of familiarity can dull our appreciation of the awesomeness of God. In particular, we fail to appreciate His holiness: His majesty, power and purity. Today’s passage teaches us that, by appreciating God’s holiness, we can better understand His grace. The gospel of Jesus Christ reveals God’s holiness and God’s grace, and we must embrace both in order to live as we ought to. In the two parts of today’s passage, we see that God’s holiness requires grace; and that God’s grace should result in our holiness.

Hebrews 12:12-17 - "Spiritual Orienteering"

We could think of Hebrews 12 as “spiritual orienteering.” We’ve already seen how the Christian life is likened to an endurance race. We know that Jesus has already run the race ahead of us, and that our ultimate destination is to be with Him. But Ch. 12 also teaches us that as we are running this race, we will inevitably face suffering and hardship, which can be disorienting. We can end up straying from God’s path and losing our way in life. But if we stay spiritually oriented to Jesus, we can stay on the right path, and will eventually arrive at our destination. In today’s passage, we see three indicators that we’re on the right spiritual path, oriented to Jesus, and three indicators that we’re on the wrong path, and in need of a course correction.

Hebrews 12:3-11 - "Suffering & Discipline"

Today’s passage is all about suffering. We tend to think that nothing good can come out of our suffering. But that’s not the case. Scripture teaches us that suffering can always produce spiritual fruit. Like other passages in the New Testament, Hebrews 12:3-11 lays out a process of spiritual growth that begins with suffering and ends with spiritual fruit.

Hebrews 10:1-18 - "Freedom From Sin"

Christians are freed from sin by the sacrifice of Christ, so let’s live like free people. Today’s passage helps us do that by removing two major obstacles: 1. Not understanding the insufficiency of our own sacrifices to free us from sin (which we see in the animal sacrifices under the Old Covenant); and 2. Not understanding and appreciating the sufficiency of Christ’s sacrifice to make us free.

Hebrews 9:1-14 - "Christ the Masterpiece"

As Modern readers, we can have a very hard time understanding and appreciating the significance of certain Old Testament realities, like the Tabernacle. But if we miss the point of these things, then we won’t be able to fully appreciate the beauty of God’s redemptive plan throughout the ages. The Tabernacle was only a preliminary sketch of God’s future masterpiece, which was the finished work of Christ for our redemption. For the purposes of today’s sermon, we’re going to look at our passage in two parts. First, we’re going to look at the preliminary sketch in vv. 1-10, and then we’ll turn to the finished masterpiece in vv. 11-14.

Hebrews 8:6-13 - "Better Promises"

In Christ, we have the better, unconditional promises of God, and these should fill us with love, joy, peace, and hope. The Old Mosaic Covenant was conditional in that it required obedience to the Law of Moses, which involved priests offering animal sacrifices, which pointed forward to the sacrificial death of Christ. But the New Covenant in Christ is unconditional because of the finished work of Christ, as we will see in today’s passage. If we miss this unconditional aspect, then we won’t experience the full blessing of living in communion with God: having the treasure of His grace and the hope of a heavenly inheritance in Christ.

Hebrews 7:20-28 - "Rest Assured"

Even though most of life’s circumstances don’t come with a guarantee, the most important things do. The author of Hebrews makes it abundantly clear that the benefits of believing in Christ are absolutely, 100% guaranteed. If we can hold on to the guarantees of God in Christ, then we can persevere without knowing what’s around every corner. In Christ, we can rest assured. Today’s passage targets two things that give us absolute assurance in Christ: His permanence and perfection.

Hebrews 7:11-19 - "The Hope of Perfection"

The opposite of the Gospel is self-righteousness or works-righteousness, the illusion that we can somehow attain perfection on our own, through our own efforts. We must let go of that illusion of self-perfection, since perfection is only possible through Christ. Today’s passage is a stark reminder of that simple fact. It reveals the inadequacy of the Levitical priesthood to make anyone perfect, and it reveals the supremacy of Christ and the perfection of His priestly service on our behalf.

Hebrews 6:9-12 - "Convincingly Christian"

As Christians, we are claiming to be the recipients of God’s grace in Christ: of His forgiveness, of eternal life, of God’s indwelling Spirit. But sadly, it’s all too easy to live our Christian lives unconvincingly. But we are called to follow Christ convincingly. And today’s passage helps us understand what that looks like. Here we see three familiar aspects of a convincingly Christian life: faith, hope, and love.

Hebrews 5:11-14 - "Progress or Regress"

When we stop becoming more spiritually mature, we become less mature. There is no spiritual “neutral” -- only spiritual progress and spiritual regress. Progress means to move forward and regress means to move backward. In today’s passage, the author is concerned that his Hebrew readers have lost spiritual momentum- they’ve stopped moving forward, and started moving backward.

Hebrews 5:7-10 - "Our Suffering Savior"

Suffering can lead us away from God. But the suffering of Christ was meant to reconnect our hearts to God. And the hope that we have in Christ helps us to persevere through the suffering in this life as we await the life to come, in which there will be no suffering. The big idea today is simply this: Jesus suffered to save us. In our passage, we see two basic realities: 1. Jesus suffered with us, and 2. Jesus suffered for us.

Hebrews 3:1-6 - "Consider Jesus"

When we fail to fix our eyes on Jesus, we stop paying attention to all that God has revealed through Him. We turn away from the truth of the Gospel, the good news about who Jesus is and what He has done, and is doing, and will do. And the result will always be a lack of hope and confidence in Christ. But, if we keep our eyes on Christ, we will become more and more Christlike. By considering who He is, we will better understand who we already are in Christ, and how we ought to be as Christians. And as we grow up in the knowledge and grace of our Lord, our confidence and hope in Him will develop and deepen over the course of our lives.