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Hebrews 1:4-14
If you have your Bibles, I'd invite you to turn with me to Hebrews
chapter 1 as we continue to make our way through this great
sermon, this great letter, together. This morning, we're going to be
looking at verses 4 to 14. I'm going to pick up in verse 3 so that
we're not starting in the middle of a sentence. Last Lord's Day we
read verses 1 to 4 but we focused on verses 1 to 3; this Lord's Day
we're going to look at verses 4 to 14 together.
And then you get into verse 4 and there's a comparative. Jesus, the
Son, is compared to someone else; and just take a look at it —
“having become as much superior to the angels.” Now there are two
interesting parts of that little phrase. The first part that ought to catch
your attention as a believer who recites The Apostles Creed, and
you’re going to recite it this morning - you recite The Nicene Creed;
you recited it last Lord's Day. The first little phrase in this sentence
that ought to interest you is this one — “having become.” What do
you mean, Jesus “having become more superior than the angels”?
We believe in the deity of Christ. There wasn't some time when
Jesus wasn't more superior than the angels. We don't believe that
there was a time when He was not deity and then He became deity
or there was a time when He was less superior and He became
more superior. So what in the world does the author of Hebrews
mean, “having become more superior”? Well, we’ll talk about that
later in the message.
But the other interesting part of that phrase is this - the comparison
to angels. Why in the world angels? Why is the author of this
sermon, this letter, comparing Jesus to angels? Well, it's because
apparently this congregation is tempted to think that angels, or at
least some of them, may be superior to Christ. We know that there
were various branches of the Jewish community, including the
Essenes, who had a very high view of angels who thought Michael
and his angels were going to reign in the kingdom to come, they
believed that the last days were upon them, and that Michael was
going to bring in the eternal reign of God. They had a very high view
of angels. And we also know, from Paul's little letter to the
Colossians, that there was an apparent temptation of some
Christians to even worship angels because Paul warns against the
worship of angels in Colossians chapter 2. Well I don't know exactly
the temptation that is facing this particular congregation, but the
author of Hebrews thinks that it's actually very important that they
understand that Jesus is superior to angels, that He's better than
angels, that He's more excellent than angels. And that's what he's
going to be talking with us about today.
Before we read God's Word, let's pray and ask for His help and
blessing.
“He (and if you take a peek, the “He” refers to the Son who has been
mentioned in verse 2) 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.
For to which of the angels did God ever say, ‘You are my Son, today
I have begotten you’?
And again, when he brings the firstborn into the world, he says, ‘Let
all God's angels worship him.’
Of the angels he says, ‘He makes his angels winds, and his
ministers a flame of fire.’
But of the Son he says, ‘Your throne, O God, is forever and ever, the
scepter of uprightness is the scepter of your kingdom. You have
loved righteousness and hated wickedness; therefore God, your
God, has anointed you with the oil of gladness beyond your
companions.’
And, ‘You, Lord, laid the foundation of the earth in the beginning,
and the heavens are the work of your hands; they will perish, but you
remain; they will all wear out like a garment, like a robe you will roll
them up, like a garment they will be changed. But you are the same,
and your years will have no end.’
And to which of the angels has he ever said, ‘Sit at my right hand
until I make your enemies a footstool for your feet’?
Are they not all ministering spirits sent out to serve for the sake of
those who are to inherit salvation?”
Amen, and thus ends this reading of God's holy, inspired, and
inerrant Word. May He write its eternal truth upon all our hearts.
Is Jesus enough for you? That's what the congregation that this
preacher is preaching to, is writing to, is wrestling with. Is Jesus
enough? If He's all I'm left with, is He enough? Is there something
better out there than Jesus? If there something outside, someone
outside of Jesus that's better, that's superior, that's more excellent?
And there's a real sense in which the author of this book has a one-
point sermon and a one-point answer. Jesus is enough; Jesus is
better. Jesus is superior; Jesus is more excellent. And oh, how we
need to hear that word.
There are two things I want you to see from this passage this
morning and the first one you’ll see right there in verse 4. Jesus, the
Son, is better than the angels; Jesus, the Son, is more excellent than
the angels — “He was much superior to the angels and His name is
more excellent than theirs.” This comparison with angels is because
this congregation is being tempted to think that angels are better
than Jesus. Now my guess is that very few of you during this last
week worshiped angels. I hope that very few of you this last week
worshiped angels. But my guess is that a great many of you, maybe
all of us, underestimated Jesus and were tempted to think that Jesus
is not enough. And the problem, you understand my friends, that you
and I are facing and the problem that this congregation was facing in
thinking angels were superior to Jesus, is the same. We are all
prone, we are all apt, to underestimate Jesus. And the one-point
sermon of this letter, of this book, is: Don't ever underestimate
Jesus. He is so excellent, He is so superior, He is so literally divine
that it is impossible to overestimate Him. Don't underestimate Jesus.
And just in case our hearts are having a hard time taking that in, he
says, “Let me just demonstrate that to you from Scripture.” Isn't that
beautiful? This pastor preaching to this congregation almost two
thousand years ago says, “Let me prove my main point from the
Bible, let me do a little exposition for you and let me show you from
the Bible.” And isn't it beautiful? He goes to Scriptures, all of which
were written hundreds of years before Jesus ever came and he
says, “I can prove to you that Jesus is superior to the angels. Even
before He came I can prove that to you from Scripture. And he takes
you to seven Scripture passages and he makes five claims about
Jesus. And just look at them with me because this is the second
thing that I want you to see in the passage, that Christ's superiority is
demonstrated Scripturally in these five ways by an appeal to the Old
Testament writings.
And the first thing that he says, look at verses 4 and 5, is that Jesus
is the very and unique Son of God. He quotes from Psalm 2, he
quotes from 2 Samuel 7, and he says that Jesus is the very and
unique Son of God. The angels are not the very and unique Son of
God; only Jesus is. Those passages apply to Jesus and to Jesus
only. He is superior to the angels.
And the second thing that he says is this. Look at verses 6 and 7.
Not only is Jesus superior to the angels as the Son, He is the master
of the angels. They are merely His servants, His ministers. And he
quotes from Psalm 97 — “and let all the angels of God worship Him.”
And then again from, “who makes his angels winds and his ministers
a flame of fire.” The point is that these angels minister in the service
of Jesus. He is their master, they are His servants, and the master is
greater than the servants. You know the old joke about the pope and
the chauffeur, right? You know, the pope wants to drive the car and
so with some difficulty he talks his chauffeur into letting him drive.
And while driving, the pope gets a speeding ticket. And the
policeman comes up to the driver's window, motions to him to roll it
down, sees that it's the pope, says, “One moment please,” walks
back to the car, calls into dispatch, and says, “I've just pulled over
the pope for speeding. I have no idea who it must be in the
backseat.”
JESUS REIGNS
And fifth, look at verses 13 to 14. Here he quotes Psalm 110. Do you
remember when we studied Psalm 110 together? I told you that the
author of Hebrews was going to quote it. Here it is; Psalm 110 verse
1. You’ll find it in verses 13 and 14 of Hebrews chapter 1. “Sit at my
right hand until I make your enemies a footstool for your feet.” Christ
is Lord! He reigns! His enemies are put under His feet; He sits at the
right hand of God, the position of authority and honor and dominion
and power in God's kingdom. And the author of Hebrews says
Scripture says that about Jesus. He is superior to the angels. You
understand why he's saying this? He's saying this because we're so
prone to underestimate Jesus.
Oh, I forgot to tell you about that “having been made” line, didn't I?
What does that mean that He, “having been made more excellent
than, superior to, the angels”? That is a phrase that the author of
Hebrews uses repeatedly to point to the unfathomably costly
redeeming work of Jesus. The angels, as glorious and exalted as
they are — and did you notice how the author of Hebrews points that
out in the very last line? He's not denigrating the angels at all; they
are servants of God. As glorious and as exalted as they are, no
angel was ever humiliated for you. No angel ever hung on the tree
bearing the full weight of your sins and the sins of the world. But the
Son of God, who is superior to angels, who is master of all angels,
who is Lord of the empire of God, who is the Creator of this world,
who sits at the right hand, He shed His blood for you. And the Father
says, “You see what My Son did for you so that you could be
forgiven, so that you could be accepted, so that you could be
brought into the family of God and inherit all of the things that I
promised to My Son, do you see what He endured for you, the
humiliation that He bore for you? No angel ever did that for you. So
by rite of what He did, I will give Him His due because He bought
you, He earned you, and it would be the most unjust thing in this
universe for Me not to pour out all blessings on you as you trust in
Him because He did this for you.” No angel ever did that for us.
I was talking to a dear friend this week and she said, she's in a very
dark place, she said, “I am on a journey of enough right now.” You
know what she means? She said, “I am having to ask myself the
question, ‘Is Jesus enough? Is Jesus enough that if this that I want
so desperately doesn't happen, I can still say Jesus is enough? Or is
Jesus enough so that if this that I don't want to happen more than
anything that I've ever not wanted to happen, if it happens, I can still
say, ‘Jesus is enough’?” Are any of you on the journey of enough?
Ever been on the journey for enough? Are you on the journey of
enough right now? Dear sister, that's where I am, and the author of
Hebrews is there waiting to say, “Jesus not only enough, He's better,
He's more, He's superior, He's more excellent, He is all, He is
everything.” Hallelujah, all I have is Christ. Hallelujah, Jesus is my
life. And if you still don't believe that, Christian, won't you come and
taste and see that He is good?
Let's pray.
Oh Lord, grant that we would taste and see that You are good by
faith, at Your table, in Jesus' name. Amen.