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Nicholas Lovins

Let Us Always

Nicholas Lovins 4 min read
15 Articles
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Nicholas Lovins
Nicholas Lovins 4 min read
15 articles

Drawing from Hebrews 10:19-25, Lovins expounds on the author's culminating exhortation to Jewish believers facing persecution and alienation, emphasizing that Christ's redemptive work perfects and fulfills the Old Covenant's priesthood, sacrifices, and rituals. The passage calls believers to draw near to God with confidence through Christ's blood, hold fast their confession of hope in the faithful promises of God, and cultivate corporate unity and mutual encouragement within the Church as a body knit together not by earthly ties but by Christ's blood. Lovins applies this exhortation to contemporary Christians, urging them to find security and identity not in individual effort but in Christ's finished work and the believing community's shared worship and mission.

What does the Bible say about drawing near to God?

The Bible encourages believers to draw near to God with full assurance of faith and confidence in Christ's redemptive work.

Hebrews 10:19-25 emphasizes the importance of drawing near to God with a true heart and full assurance of faith. This passage reminds us that through the blood of Jesus and His perfect sacrifice, we have direct access to the Holy Place. By acknowledging our sin and being cleansed, we can approach God boldly, confident in His promises. The encouragement to hold fast to our hope and to not neglect meeting together is crucial for our spiritual health and growth as a community of believers, especially during trials.

Hebrews 10:19-25

How do we know that Christ's work is perfect?

Christ's work is perfect as it fulfills and surpasses the Old Covenant's sacrifices and rituals, providing complete redemption for His people.

The author of Hebrews makes a compelling case for the perfection of Christ's work throughout the book. By comparing Christ to the Old Testament priests and sacrificial system, it's clear that Christ is the ultimate fulfillment of God's promise. His sacrifice not only meets the requirements of the law but also establishes a new covenant where believers can have confidence and assurance of their redemption. This certainty is built on the faithfulness of God who promised to redeem His people completely, as expressed beautifully in Hebrews 10:19-25.

Hebrews 10:19-25

Why is community important for Christians?

Community is vital for Christians as it fosters love, encouragement, and growth in faith, uniting believers as one body in Christ.

In Hebrews 10:24-25, believers are urged to stir up one another to love and good works and not to neglect meeting together. This communal aspect is essential, especially in times of persecution and struggle. The early Jewish believers faced significant challenges, and the call for community provided them with the support and collective strength needed to remain steadfast in their faith. The Church acts as a new community where love and purpose are shared, helping believers to build one another up and fulfill the works of the Kingdom together.

Hebrews 10:24-25

Therefore, brothers, since we have confidence to enter the holy places by the blood of Jesus, by the new and living way that he opened for us through the curtain, that is, through his flesh, and since we have a great priest over the house of God, let us draw near with a true heart in full assurance of faith, with our hearts sprinkled clean from an evil conscience and our bodies washed with pure water. Let us hold fast the confession of our hope without wavering, for he who promised is faithful. And let us consider how to stir up one another to love and good works, not neglecting to meet together, as is the habit of some, but encouraging one another, and all the more as you see the Day drawing near. - Hebrews 10:19–25

    The book of Hebrews is one of the most powerful presentations of the Gospel in all of Scripture. Written to Jewish believers, it contains some of the strongest language about the supremacy and divinity of Christ, the perfection of His work, and the assurance of redemption found in the New Covenant. For 10 glorious chapters, our Author takes painstaking effort to draw parallels between Christ and the priests, sacrifices, rituals, and law of the Old Covenant. Never once does he attempt to abolish them, but by strength of conviction and faith he establishes them in the person and work of our Lord, giving light to shadow and form to the things former.
 
    Dealing with the struggles our early Jewish brothers faced and the call to return to the old ways, his patience and directness are both stark and quick to correct. Many times I have drawn strength in my trials from the conviction of his argument and the truth of the perfection of Christ's work for His people. But the above passage is the culmination of his argument. This final exhortation is to a group of people who felt lost, alienated from their former lives, and were regularly persecuted by both the State and the community that they once called family.
 
    He calls us to have confidence, not in ourselves but in the blood of the perfect lamb, to bring us into the Holy Place. To draw near to God in full assurance of the faith that unites us to Him and His work on behalf of His people. An exhortation to proclaim and profess our magnificent hope because YHWH who redeems is faithful to see through His promises. This commendation pushes us to come together, united in love and purpose to see the works of the Kingdom fulfilled and our hearts uplifted together in the body that is Christ. We have in the Church a new community, bound together not in our blood ties but the blood of Christ, not in our oaths but in the certain promises of the Holy one, not in our labors but the complete perfection that is the work of Christ on the cross. 

    These brothers were afraid they had lost their traditions, but our Author tells them that Christ is the fullness of these shadows. They thought they were losing a renewing hope, but Christ is a permanent hope. The community had turned its back on them, but they were a new community. Called out together to meet, serve, learn, love, and worship; not as individuals strewn about but as a body that functions as one. Lifting each other up, stirring each other up, building upon the foundation that is Christ into the Kingdom that was promised of old.
 
    May we take this to heart in our day. Surrounded on all sides and aliens in the world that sees itself as broken and crumbling, we are different. Our fortress is strong, our world renewed, and our hope is certain. Be confident, assured, and at peace, dear brothers. 

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