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Hebrews 1:1-4
If you have your Bibles, I'd invite you to turn with me to Hebrews
chapter 1. We’re going to be looking at verses 1 to 4 this morning,
but after our reading I'd like you to keep your Bibles open because I
want to turn to a few passages in the book of Hebrews to illustrate
one particular point. We’re beginning a new series which we have
called, “Better,” for reasons that I hope you’ll understand by the time
that we're finished this morning. That's an important word in the book
of Hebrews. It's found in a number of places in the New Testament
with reference to the same theme but none more frequently than in
the letter, this sermon, this book of Hebrews.
Well we don't know who the author, the preacher, was. We don't
know where the congregation was that he was writing to, and we
don't know where he was writing from. And you know what? That's
all good and well because it leaves all the focus on his message and
that's where the focus needs to be. And the message over and over
again is: Jesus. Over and over, the author of this sermon, this letter,
this book, focuses us on Jesus and stresses His finality and
superiority for the Christian faith. Larry Richards says this. “The book
of Hebrews begins with Jesus. Total confidence in Him must be the
basis of our new life and of our identity as Christians. It is important
to realize that all there is of salvation for us is to be found in Jesus.”
And the author of Hebrews will say that to us fifty different ways over
and over again to drive that point home and deep into our hearts and
souls.
“Long ago, at many times and in many ways, God spoke to our
fathers by the prophets, but in these last days he has spoken to us
by his Son, whom he appointed the heir of all things, through whom
also he created the world. He is the radiance of the glory of God and
the exact imprint of his nature, and he upholds the universe by the
word of his power. After making purification for sins, he sat down at
the right hand of the Majesty on high, having become as much
superior to angels as the name he has inherited is more excellent
than theirs.”
Amen, and thus ends this reading of God's holy, inspired, and
inerrant Word. May He write its eternal truth upon all our hearts.
Maybe you’re entering this New Year flagging in your faith. Maybe
you’re finding it hard to even pray. Maybe you feel that your religion
and your worship experiences have come up short and you’re so
disappointment, maybe even desperate, that you’re beginning to
look somewhere else for the answers, you’re looking somewhere
else for the satisfaction that has escaped you or the hope that
eludes you or the fulfillment that you lack. Well if you’re there,
Hebrews is waiting for you, and the author, the preacher of this
message, is saying that Jesus is better than whatever else it is that
you’re looking for. Jesus is better. He's a better Savior, He's a better
Priest, He's a better sacrifice for a better covenant and for a better
way of life. So if you’re lacking and empty, it's not because Jesus is
not what you need or not all that you need, it's because you don't
have enough of Him. And that's one reason why this word, “better,”
keeps occurring in the letter of the Hebrews, the sermon of the
Hebrews, because we're so tempted to think that there's something
else out there better. And the author is saying to us, “No, Jesus is
better. There's not something out there better than Jesus; Jesus is
better than anything else.” And I want you to see this theme in the
book of Hebrews.
Keep your Bible open, and turn with me to Hebrews 6 verse 9. Here,
the author of Hebrews says that “we feel sure of better things -
things that belong to salvation.” So in Hebrews 6:9 he speaks of a
better salvation. Look at Hebrews 7 verse 19. There, he speaks of a
better hope “through which we draw near to God.” We've got a better
salvation and a better hope in Jesus. Then look at Hebrews 7 verse
22. “Jesus is the guarantor of a better covenant.” We not only have a
better salvation and a better hope, we have a better covenant in
Jesus. Turn forward to Hebrews chapter 8 and look at verse 6.
“Christ has obtained a ministry that is much more excellent than the
old as the covenant he mediates is better, since it is enacted on
better promises.” So we not only have a better covenant; we have
better promises. By the way, this verse reminds us that the theme of
“Better” will not only be shown to you by your English Bibles by
looking for the word, “better” in your concordance, but by looking at
phrases like “superior” or “more excellent” that theme will be carried
out in the book.
Turn forward to Hebrews 9:23. “The heavenly things themselves with
better sacrifices than these.” And so with Jesus, we have better
sacrifices. Look at Hebrews 10:34. “You knew that you yourselves
had a better possession and an abiding one.” So the Gospel that
Jesus brings gives you a better and abiding possession or
inheritance. Turn forward to Hebrews 11 verse 16. They desired,
these pilgrims of faith in the days of the old covenant — what did
they desire? “They desired a better country, a heavenly one,” and
we have that in Christ. Look at Hebrews 11:35. What did these old
covenant saints endure? They were tortured, they refused to accept
release. Why? “So that they might rise again to a better
life.” Hebrews 11:40 — “God has provided something better for us,
that apart from us they should not be made perfect.” Hebrews
12:24 — The blood of Jesus speaks to us “a better word than the
blood of Abel.” That theme of “Better” is found throughout the book
of Hebrews, and this morning I want you to feel that theme of
“Better” with regard to Jesus in your bones. And I want to do that by
looking directly at the description of Jesus that is found here in
Hebrews chapter 1 verses 1 to 4. Actually, we won't even get out of
verse 3. It's all going to be in verses 1, 2, and 3, and I want you to
see just two things that the author of Hebrews teaches us about
Jesus in Hebrews 1 verses 1 to 3.
The first thing you’re going to see in verse 1 and the first half of
verse 2. And it's simply this. The Son is God's final word. The Son,
Jesus, the Son of God, is God's final word. Look at what he says.
“Long ago, at many times and in many ways, God spoke to our
fathers by the prophets, but in these last days he has spoken to us
by his Son.” The author of Hebrews is emphasizing that Jesus is
God's final word to us; there's no word beyond or better than Jesus
that God has or will speak to His people. Jesus is the final word. And
think of the significance of that in this context. He's speaking to
Hebrew Christians from a Jewish background and they had received
true and clear revelation of God from the prophets in various times
and in various ways. But in contrast to that, the author of Hebrews
says that now God has spoken to you by His own Son, not just His
servants, the prophets, but by His Son, His Son's person, His Son's
works, His Son's words, and there's never ever going to be a
superior, a better revelation from God than the revelation that He is
giving to you in His Son.
Now by the way, in just saying that, the author of Hebrews has
contradicted three world views that surround you right now. There's
the worldview of pluralism that wants to say that Jesus is a truth but
He's not the truth. No, the author of Hebrews says that Jesus is
God's final word. He is the way, the truth, and the life. Or our Muslim
friends who want to believe that Jesus was a prophet but He wasn't
the final, the greatest prophet; no, you have to wait until Mohammad
until you get God's final word. The author of Hebrews is standing up
on his toes and he's saying, “No! Jesus is God's final word, not
Mohammad. Jesus is God's fullest revelation of who He is and how
He saves.” And then we live in a day and age where Mormonism is
expanding in the world and Mormonism claims to have an ongoing
revelation, more revelation than we've ever had before. And the
author of Hebrews is saying, “No! Jesus is the final word.”
And I want you to sit back and think about that for a moment, my
friends. Do you understand what the author of Hebrews is claiming?
He is claiming that you, dear Christian, have a clearer and fuller
revelation of God in Jesus, in the Gospel, than any of the greatest
Old Testament saints. You have had a fuller revelation of God given
to you in Jesus than Moses did, than Abraham did, than David did!
What a blessing! What a privilege! What an accountability, that we
have been given that full revelation of God to us in Jesus. It calls
upon us to believe. That's the first thing I want you to see. The Son
is God's final word.
The second thing is this, and you’ll see it in the second half of verse
2 and in all of verse 3. And it's simply this. The Jesus that we believe
in, the Jesus that this book preaches, the Jesus who is offered in the
Gospel, the Jesus that we believe in is this Jesus who is the divine
Son. Now if you look at the second half of verse 2 and all of verse 3,
I think that you will be able to count up seven things that the author
of Hebrews crams into those two little verses to say about Jesus. He
wants you to get an idea of the greatness of this Jesus. He wants
you to get an idea of what it means to say that Jesus is God's Son,
that He's fully divine. And I want you to look at these seven words
that he says about Jesus.
First of all, notice that he says that Jesus is the heir of all things. God
appointed Him what? Verse 2 — “heir of all things.” Now you don't
need to know a whole lot about inheritance law to understand this. If
Jesus is the heir of all things, how are you going to participate in His
inheritance? Only if you are related to Him. If He's the heir of all
things, if in the end everything's coming to Him, how are you going
to share in the inheritance? Only if you’re united to Him by faith.
That's the only way you’re going to inherit. Have you ever been part
of a family squabble where somebody's been cut out of a will? It's
not a happy thing; I've seen it happen. You want to be a part of this
will? You have to be united to Jesus by faith because He's the heir
of everything. That's the first thing that the author of Hebrews says
about Him.
The second thing is this. God made the world through Him. Look at
verse 2 — “through whom also He created the world.” Jesus is the
one through whom God made the world. Good Hebrews understood
that God was the maker of heaven and earth. We confessed that this
morning using the Nicene Creed and on next Lord's Day when we
have the Lord's Supper we’ll confess it again when we use the
Apostle's Creed, but God is the maker of heaven and earth. When
the author of Hebrews tells you that Jesus is the one through whom
God created the world, he's telling you that Jesus is God. You know,
understanding that someone is the author of a work is designed to
raise your esteem to that person, for you to give them a due esteem
for what they have created.
When I was ten years old, my father took me to Scotland and he was
a member of the Rotary Club — some of you are Rotarians, and if
you’re a Rotarian you know that it means that you've got to go to all
those meetings. And so even while we were in Scotland he had to
look up the address of the Edinburgh Rotary Club and we went to
the Edinburgh Rotary Club on Tuesday for lunch. And they had beef
and kidney pie! Ahh! He took me to Wimpy Hamburger afterwards to
have a hamburger because I could not eat that beef and kidney pie!
But while we were there, he got into the most interesting discussion
with the fine Scottish gentleman who he was sitting next to at the
meal. And it was a discussion about the Scotch-Irish, those Scots
who had emigrated from Scotland to Northern Ireland and then come
to the United States. And in the midst of this discussion, my father
said to this distinguished gentleman, “You don't know what you’re
talking about!” Well I noticed the man's round, Rotarian name badge
said that his name was J.D. Mackie and that he was at the University
of Edinburgh. Well, as I was sitting there quietly listening to their
conversation I had a book in front of me called, The History of
Scotland. It was written by J.D. Mackie! And I kept poking my dad,
“Dad! Dad!” … “Son, son!” And so as we were walking out I said,
“Dad, you know that man that you just told that he didn't know
anything that Scottish history? He's a professor of Scottish history at
the University of Edinburgh!” Oh, it should have raised my father's
esteem for Dr. Mackie but instead he said to me, “Well, he still didn't
know that he was talking about!” Knowing that Jesus is the author,
the creator of everything, ought to raise our esteem for Him, and that
is what the author of Hebrews is doing.
But the author of Hebrews isn't done. He says a fifth thing; look
again at verse 3. “He upholds the universe by the word of his
power.” He is the upholder of all things by the word of His power.
You know the Greeks, in their mythology, had Atlas holding up the
earth, but the author of Hebrews is saying that Jesus does more. He
not only upholds the world, He moves it towards its ultimate end and
destiny. He is the providential upholder of all things.
And then seventh, look again one more time at verse 3. “He sat
down at the right hand of the Majesty on high.” Now sitting at the
right hand, in the New Testament and the Old, is a picture of
reigning. You remember when we studied Psalm 110 last month? It
speaks of “The LORD saying to my Lord, ‘Sit at my right hand.’” It's a
picture of reign, of honor, of rule. And the author of Hebrews here
alludes to Psalm 110; later he’ll quote it. But here he alludes to that
and he says Jesus is sitting at the right hand of God. But He's not
just there receiving honor, having servants fan Him with ostrich and
peacock feathers, He's actively interceding for you. Do you know
that there's one place in the New Testament where we find Jesus
not sitting at the right hand but standing. Remember where that is?
It's Acts 7:56. It's where Stephen is being martyred for his witness to
Jesus and as he is dying, he sees heaven opened and Jesus
standing at the right hand. Now whatever could that mean?
Now that's the picture of Jesus that the author of Hebrews opens
this sermon, this letter with. Why does he tell you this? Because if
our Christian life is flagging, Jesus is what we need. If our Christian
life is flagging, Jesus is who we need. In Him the fullness of deity
dwells in bodily form. In Him are all the blessings of God from whom
all blessings flow. If you feel empty, it's not because He's empty, it's
because you need more of Him because He's all you need. Don't
you love that song that we written by Sovereign Grace Ministries a
few years ago? It has the chorus, “Hallelujah, all I have is Christ.
Hallelujah, Jesus is my life.” That's what the author of Hebrews is
saying. “All I have is Christ and that's all I need because He's better.”
I'd rather have Jesus than angels; I'd rather have Jesus than
anything because He's better. We need to get Him. We need to get
Him better because He's what we need, nothing else. Let's pray.
O Lord, in these days together in this book, grant that we would get
Jesus better because He's what we need. We ask this in His name,
amen.
Let's sing of Him using the first two stanzas of number 310.
Receive this blessing from your better Savior. Grace, mercy, and
peace to you from God our Father and our Lord, Jesus, the Christ.
Amen.