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Robert Hawker

Hebrews 9:16

Hebrews 9:16
Robert Hawker March, 28 2016 4 min read
730 Articles 1 Sermon 30 Books
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March, 28 2016
Robert Hawker
Robert Hawker 4 min read
730 articles 1 sermons 30 books
What does the Bible say about Jesus's death and its significance?

Jesus's death is essential for the testament He left, ensuring the benefits of His will are granted to believers.

Hebrews 9:16-17 emphasizes that a testament is only effective after the death of the testator. This indicates that Jesus's death was necessary for His will to take effect, allowing the blessings and benefits intended for His people to be fully realized. The Holy Spirit illustrates this concept through human relationships, showing that just as earthly wills require a person to die for them to be enforced, so too did Jesus have to die for His testament to be effective. His death confirmed the will, ensuring believers that all promised blessings are secure and will be executed with His faithful oversight.

Hebrews 9:16-17

How do we know the promises of Jesus's will are true?

Jesus's resurrection affirms the certainty of His will and the execution of His promises to believers.

The truth of Jesus's promises stems from His perfect will and the assurance that He, as the living testator, actively oversees the fulfillment of His gifts. Unlike earthly testators who appoint executors who may fail, Christ ensures the execution of His legacies because He lives eternally. This guarantees that His promises of mercy, peace, and eternal blessings will be securely provided for His people. Hebrews 9:16-17 reiterates that these promises hold true because they are grounded in His steadfast love and commitment to His chosen ones.

Hebrews 9:16-17

Why is the concept of Jesus's testament important for Christians?

Jesus's testament assures Christians of their inheritance and relationship with Him, securing eternal peace and blessings.

The concept of Jesus's testament is vital for Christians as it highlights the assurance of their inheritance as children of God. Through His testament, believers are promised not only temporal and spiritual blessings but also the hope of eternal life. The depth of this relationship is characterized by Jesus referring to His followers as His family — His bride, His brothers, and His children. This relational dynamic emphasizes the importance of being 'joint-heirs' with Christ, which is foundational to understanding the depth of salvation and the richness of God's sovereign grace bestowed upon His people.

Hebrews 9:16-17, Romans 8:17

"For where a testament is, there must also of necessity be the death of the testator; for a testament is of force after men are dead, otherwise it is of no strength at all while the testator liveth."—Heb. ix. 16, 17.

— Hebrews 9:16

Behold, my soul, how graciously the Holy Ghost hath here represented the necessity of Jesus's death, in order that the testament, or will, he left behind him, might have the intended effect; and all the benefits and blessings he bequeathed in it to his people, might be fully paid and made over to them for their present peace and everlasting happiness. Now, my soul, mark down, for this day's special meditation, the many precious things here contained. Observe how very accommodating the Holy Ghost is to explain to thee divine things, by the similitude of human transactions. As a man makes his will, so Jesus made his. As what a man gives is altogether a free and voluntary act, so Jesus was not constrained by what he gave in his blessed will; but the whole was the result of his own free, gracious, and everlasting love. And as a man must die before his will can be put in force, so Jesus must, and did die, that his testament and will might have the full effect also. But there is one sweet point more to be taken into this account, in which, my soul, thy Jesus hath infinitely surpassed all men in this article of their wills. When a man dies he appoints by will an executor, to whom he must trust the management of all his effects after his decease; and should his executor prove unfaithful, his best designs for those he loved, when living, may all fail of the end when he is dead. Now here lies the sweetness of Jesus's will: - he not only made the will, but he himself will see it fully executed; for as he died once, in order that by his death his will might be confirmed, so he ever liveth to see the whole of his blessed gifts and legacies paid. Precious, precious Jesus! how sure then is thy will, and the certainty of every tittle of it being fulfilled. Now, my soul, there are two grand things which concern thee to inquire concerning the will of the Lord Jesus. The first is, whether thou hast any interest in it? And the second is, what the Lord Jesus hath left behind him? Recollect, my soul, that in this instance, as in the former, when men make their wills, it is to dispose of their effects to their relations, their friends, their families. Jesus also hath his relations, his friends, his family. Yes, thou dear Lord, thou condescendest to call thy people thy spouse, thy brethren, thy children, thy jewels, thy redeemed. My soul, dost thou claim relationship to Jesus? Canst thou prove, or hast thou proved his will? Is Jesus thine husband? Hath he betrothed thee to himself? Again - hast thou the marks of a child in God's family? Art thou born again? Again - if you are his, then hast thou his Spirit: "for he. that is joined to the Lord is one Spirit." If you are a child of God, and a joint-heir with Christ, then art thou under his divine leadings; "for as many as are led by the Spirit of God, they are the sons of God." If thou hast these marks of relationship, thou mayest safely look for his gifts. Surely Jesus hath remembered in his legacies his spouse, his children. And Oh, what an inventory wilt thou find, my soul, under the second inquiry, when thou hast fully proved the first. Oh, what legacies, what gifts, what an inheritance, art thou entitled to by the will of Jesus! All temporal blessings, all spiritual blessings, all eternal bIessings! Pardon, mercy, peace, in the blood of his cross; the sweet enjoyment of all providences in this life, and the sure possession of everlasting happiness in that which is to come, Oh, how true was it, my God and Saviour, when thou didst say, "I will cause them that love me to inherit substance."

From Poor Man's Morning Portions by Robert Hawker.
Robert Hawker
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