Sunday Service - 2025-09-21

Sunday Service - 2025-09-21

Episode description

Our Eternal Advocate
Hebrews 7:11-28 Jamie Allebach

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0:14

Welcome to the Lansdale Life Church podcast.

0:18

If you're seeking a closer relationship with Jesus Christ, this podcast is for you.

0:24

Thank you for joining us today.

0:34

What a great time of worship, right? Isn't it just amazing how no matter where we're at,

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God just like draws us in. I mean, as we just come and just lay aside things that we came here with,

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no matter what it is, if it's issues at home or work or worries or fears or whatever,

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when we just kind of just resolve to worship Him, He just draws us into Him. That was awesome. Thank

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you. Thank you, worship team. That was an incredible, incredible time. Well, here we are in the book of

1:13

Hebrews, and this has been a really exciting study, hasn't it? I mean, I've really enjoyed it. I just

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love the Calvary church model of teaching. So I mean, as we came here, this was my first time

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kind of being exposed to this kind of moving through the Bible. I've been teaching for many,

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many, many decades, and I always thought I enjoyed topical teaching. I'll pick a topic,

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and God's putting on my heart and just kind of build that out, and that's such an easy way to

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teach. It really is an easy way to teach. This is a challenging way to teach because you have to

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look at everything in context of how it was written or God intended. It's easy to kind of

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sometimes, I don't want to say cherry pick, but I'll say cherry pick. It's kind of easy sometimes to

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pick scriptures to support something we want to say, but when you look at scripture in context

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and you begin to study it, it's just a different level, and I really, really enjoy this.

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So the book of Hebrews, there's a ton of awesome things to dig in, and there's a

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lot of really, really deep, healthy debate even among the scholars about things within Hebrews,

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when it was written, why it was written, who wrote it, all of these things, and I'm going to really

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try really, really hard not to nerd out on you folks and get too entrenched in all this stuff.

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I told my friend Ken Bailey here, I said, just give me the symbol if I'm kind of getting too

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nerdy on stuff, but I do want to get just a little bit into it, totally to the point where you don't

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glaze over too much. How's that sound? If you start to glaze over, I'll try to pay attention

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to it. So scholars used to think that it was written before the temple destructions,

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and most of them have shifted that thought process. One of the reasons they thought that was because

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of the language that was used in it in present tense, and I love a lot of the stylistic writing

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throughout the Bible. It kind of gives you indications of where folks were coming from,

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but there's a ton of super interesting things in here. I personally just love the dialogue

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around the Levitical priesthood and worship and all that sort of thing. So let's get into it right

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here. This book digs into a lot of the Jewish culture and worship and how the Jews looked at

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it. The book was written very specifically to Jews, not that we... When you think about the audience of

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who things were written to back then, you think, well, maybe that's not applicable to me. Of course,

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this is very applicable to us. But in this particular chapter that we're going through now,

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the priesthood really comes to the forefront of things. I don't know about you, but

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for much of my life as a follower of Jesus, the idea of a priesthood was just very distant from

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what I understood, my only understanding of priesthood with priests in a Catholic church.

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I didn't understand the context or really understand identifying Jesus as a high priest,

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because I never really understood the whole priesthood idea. But the temple

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was the epicenter of Judaism in the Levitical priesthood. It's where they observed the law.

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It was kind of the epicenter for all that stuff, the calendar of feasts, all the festivals and

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things that all centered around this temple that you see right before you hear. And once the

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temple was destroyed in 70 AD by the Romans, Judaism really changed radically,

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and they lost their spiritual identity. So this temple here is called the Second

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Temple, and it was built about 500 years BC, and then it was majorly renovated by King Herod.

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The Jews were allowed to rebuild this during the Persian captivity, because the Persians were

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a lot nicer than the Babylonians and the Assyrians. So they said, yeah, build your temple

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back, that would be real nice, whereas the Babylonians just quite wiped everything out.

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The original temple was about 950-960 BC, and it was built by Solomon, as many of us know.

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So before that, they had the tabernacle or the tent of worship, and we've studied a lot

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about that on Wednesday night, and this is one of those areas where I was really tempted to

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kind of dig in and just really talk a lot about that, but I was straining from a lot of that.

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So that was originally developed. It was kind of this mobile tent that they could move around,

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but this was how the Jews worshiped. This was how they drew close to God, and the reason that is

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foreign to many of us who know Jesus and walk with Jesus and can consider us followers of Jesus,

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because that idea of this place and this idea of this very structured worship just doesn't

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fit in with what God has done in our lives. So the Jews at this point were having a very,

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very difficult time understanding this idea that Jesus was bringing forth, and there were

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many, many followers, many Jewish followers of Jesus in the first and second century and as it

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folded out, and they were actually being persecuted by their own own faith. So the Jews

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that were still really not followers of Jesus, and they didn't look at him as a messiah, they were

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constantly pressuring the Jews that were following Jesus to, you know, this is not the right way.

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This is not what we were called to do. So Hebrews bring some great comparisons and great

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contrast between this older system and then this newer system that Jesus was talking about,

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and this newer idea of holiness and righteousness and what it means. As some of you know,

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you know, the Jewish law was just that. Law after law after law after law started out as

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hundreds of laws evolved into thousands and thousands of laws. So it was this very, very

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regimented system of how to draw close to God. And I don't know about you, but for me,

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before I knew Jesus, before I came into a relationship with Jesus, that's how I perceived

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religion.

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Laws, rules, can't do this, got to give up that, can't be like this, can't be like normal people,

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you got to be like this and follow the rules. That's how I viewed it. Maybe not as extensive

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as the Levitical law, but that's how I looked at it, and I believe that's how many people

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in everyday life view faith, that have not experienced it in a way that perhaps we do.

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And these Jews that were enlightened at the time as they saw Jesus as, hey, this is the guy.

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This is the guy we've been talking about for hundreds of years. And they got on and they

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began to follow, they began to experience this new idea of attaining righteousness in this new way

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that Jesus provides full access, unlimited access to God and to the heavenlies and to this realm

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that they had so vigorously followed through this rule system. So let's take a look at,

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I want to do just kind of a quick, brief recap of some things just to kind of lay the foundation

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for where we're going here. So the author of Hebrews, Jesus, they're making a case

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here, right from the beginning to where we're at, where we're coming up on now. They're making a

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case of Jesus, making a case that Jesus is higher than the angels. So the angels were viewed,

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as we see in the Bible, as messengers. They would come and they were holy and they were powerful,

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but Jesus is higher than these messengers. And he goes on to say, this is, and I'm sure this was

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just like really rough for some of them to hear is like, you know, Moses is, you know, really,

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they kind of held Moses up as kind of this, this icon, this God in the Old Testament. This is kind

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of our God. And, you know, he was a prophet and he was a leader, you know, in the house of God,

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you know, took the Israelites out of, out of Egypt, you know, took them through, took them

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through the desert, led them right up to the promised land. And the author is saying,

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Jesus is the faithful son over the house of God, not in the house of God, but over the house of God.

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And he's greater than Moses. And then he goes on to say, Joshua, who is the one who led the

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Israelites into the promised land, into that rest. And the author is saying, Jesus leads us into

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God's ultimate permanent rest. And then he began to talk about the high priest and Aaron's role.

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Aaron was appointed, you know, as high priest, the very first high priest. And they're saying

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that Jesus is this eternal high priest. Not only that, he was sinless in this process. Priests were

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not sinless. They had to go through the same atoning process as everyone else. But they were

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the leaders within that. And the author is saying that, yeah, this was good, but Jesus is better.

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And then he gets into talking about milk, he's a deck. This is one of those things

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that once I read the Bible, I would always used to just scoot past that stuff.

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And it's really easy to miss things when we do that. Now, when I see things that I don't understand,

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I immediately look at that as, this is great. This is kind of this little Easter egg that's

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put here for me to follow along, follow along the path. So, you know, Melchizedek, you know,

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he predated the priesthood because you know what? The first thing that these Jews would have said

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is that, well, Jesus can't be a priest because he's not from the tribe of Levi. He's not a Levite.

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Only priests can, only Levites can be priests. So the author is making this case here. He's here,

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yeah, yeah, yeah. But he is in the priesthood of Melchizedek, which predates. And we're going to

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get into a little, just a little bit of this, not a ton of it, just a little bit of this we're

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going to get into. And then he begins to talk about the old covenant and the law, which we're

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going to talk a little bit about here today, that Jesus brings this new way, this better,

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this better way. So, so Jesus offers this clearer version, this better way for the Jewish people

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and us, but it challenged everything that they knew about faith. So, and this is one thing that I was

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never really, and I still don't have a full understanding, but I have a much better

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understanding of it. You know, I really used to look at, okay, this is old, this is new, old is gone,

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new is here, old is no good, old is bad. And really Jesus, if you read the Gospels and read

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and really study how Jesus approached Torah and the old covenant, he never abolished anything.

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He didn't remove. In fact, he said verbatim, I haven't come to remove any of this. He was the

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fulfillment of it. He represented and he explained with every breath that he had

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what the true meaning was of the old covenant. So, so as we talk about this, it puts it in easy

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context to say the old verses are new because Jesus brought a better, more fulfilled way,

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a better understanding of the law, even in ways, definitely in ways that the Jews just never

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understood it to be. But even for us, as we, as we look at it, ways that we don't, he, he

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demonstrated what it really meant. And, you know, he was basically essentially saying that, that,

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that, that you no longer really have a need for the temple, you know, or mediators. But this idea,

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you know, of, of, of Torah and the law, I'm giving you a better, clearer way of interpreting it.

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And then as this book was written, they would have understood that this was, as Jesus was talking

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about it, they wouldn't have understood the sacrifice, his sacrifice that went along with

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it, but they certainly would, would have now. So God presents this better way. His kingdom is better

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than the riches of this world. Isn't it? You know, I think of things that I use to strive for

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and things that I used to want out of this world. And I look now and I see his way is just a better

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way. And, and as I mentioned earlier, many times we think of, okay, if I come,

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you know, if I come to God and I really commit to this faith thing, man, I got to give up all this

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stuff that I really like and I really enjoy doing. And we don't have a grasp yet that

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God's way is so, so, so much better and so much more fulfilling than any of that could be. You

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know, being in the presence of God, like this morning, you know, worship is just one way,

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you know, in which we experience the presence of God is so much better than the things out there.

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You know, when we think of, you know, what do I like certain things, you know, why do certain

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things just excite me, you know, and all of that, you know, because, you know, certain things like,

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you know, you know, nightclubs and parties and, you know, drinking and, you know, drugs and all

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these kind of things and, you know, all types of things that we look at now as believers and say,

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you know, you know, there's no life in that. Well, you think that there's life in that when you're

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living through it, because all these endorphins are firing off in your mind and saying, wow,

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this is just great, right? You want a real explosion of endorphins, you know, to come to

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God, man, and just be in His presence, you know. His love is incomparable to anything out there.

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So Jesus was providing, the author of Hebrews is providing this better way. So let's dig in

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to the text. Now,

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so we're going to tackle Hebrews 7, 11 through 29. I'm not going to read the whole thing, but I'm

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going to read a decent amount because we're going to really, really, really dissect this pretty well.

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So now, perfection had been attainable through the Levitical priesthood for under the people,

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under that the people received the law. What further need would there have been for another

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priest to arise after the order of Melchizedek rather than one named in the order of Aaron?

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For when there was a change in the priesthood, there is necessarily a change in the law as

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well. For the one whom these things are spoken belonged to another tribe from which no one has

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ever served at the altar. For it is evident that our Lord was a descendant from Judah.

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And in the connection with that tribe, Moses said nothing about priests.

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This becomes even more evident when another priest arises in the likeness of Melchizedek,

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who has become a priest, not on the basis of a legal requirement concerning bodily

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descent, but by the power of an indestructible life. For it is witnessed of him. You are a

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priest forever after the order of Melchizedek. For on the one hand, a formal commandment is set

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aside because of its weakness and uselessness for the law made nothing perfect. But on the other

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hand, a better hope is introduced through which we draw near to God. And it was not without an

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oath. For those who formally became priests were made such without an oath. But this one was made

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a priest with an oath by the one who said to him, the Lord has sworn and will not change his mind.

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For you are a priest forever. This makes Jesus the guarantee of a better covenant. The former

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priests were many in number because they were prevented by death from continuing in office.

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So they were in there for office, kind of like Supreme Court, right?

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But this holds the priesthood permanently because it continues forever. So this is,

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that's a lot, a lot to read. And we're going to dig in to some of this. But let's take a

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quick look at the priesthood. And I promise I won't get too, too deep into this. So the first,

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the first priest was Aaron, and he was the brother of Moses. So let's take a look at what,

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what it meant to be a high priest. So this is, I don't, I don't know if that's Aaron or not.

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I mean, I guess it could be, but it's a, it's an example of, of how the high priest dressed.

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Pretty wild, right? We, we, we got, we got deep into this on, on Wednesday nights when we were

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going, going through the Levitical, but we won't get that deep into it here. But the high priest

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had to be from the line of Aaron. So from the tribe of Levi must be without physical defect or

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blemish, must maintain a higher standard of holiness than ordinary priests who were special,

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consecrated garments like the ephod, the breastplate with 12 stones representing the 12 tribes of Judah

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of Israel, the robe, the tunic, the turban, the golden plate, you know, holy is the Lord,

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all of these things, everything you see here on this high priest had meaning, deep spiritual

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meaning. And when you dig into it deep enough, you realize how it points to a greater high priest,

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which is, which is Jesus. So the importance of the high priest to, to the Jews, these guys

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were the spiritual leaders. They basically representative from, from God. They were the

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mediator. They stood between the nation of Israel and God. So you got to God through,

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through these guys. They were, they oversaw the sacrificial system, which again is another amazing,

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amazing thing to get in for the entire nation. They were guardians of worship.

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You know, when we talk about the worship here and the worship team, I mean, these Levites,

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boy, they, they worship. In fact, they, their, their worship was so powerful.

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You know, in the time of David, they would send the lead, the musicians out ahead of the warriors.

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So they would be out in the forefront of things. That's the power of worship that these,

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that these Levites had. So they were the bearer of the nation. In other words, they,

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they were, they were showing them and demonstrating how to get to God.

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So over the centuries, you know, you know, coming up to the time of Jesus, you know,

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over hundreds of years, this beautiful, wonderful priesthood that God, God had instituted had, had

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become institutionalized and political and corrupt. And again, there's so much to understand what

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happened, you know, through the various captivities that they went through and how things just kind of,

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you know, fell apart as a nation, but they were not even, even in the most remote sense,

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close to what they were supposed to be in the time, in the time of Jesus. So very political,

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very corrupt, all about spiritual control and manipulation and power. So the high priests had

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become political instead of these are the people we can go to when we want to draw close. They were,

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they were, they were even somewhat of a paid position. So, you know, if the more money you

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could offer, it could kind of get you into some of these positions within, within the priesthood.

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And, and they were instead of, you know, when you think of someone that's going to help guide you

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to, to God, you think of someone super approachable, someone that can kind of help navigate through

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some of these things. These guys were not that. They were, they were feared. They were not

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approachable in, in that way. They were head of, head of the Sanhedrum, which

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was the group basically that orchestrated capturing, killing, killing Jesus. And,

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and that's another, another area of, of understanding. We often very much confuse this idea of,

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you know, when we think of, you know, you know, we, we, instead of looking at, you know, the,

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the high leaders, you know, the Sanhedrum and the high priest, you know, we often use the word

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Pharisees and they're very different, very different. There were many Pharisees who came,

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came into the saving knowledge, knowledge of Jesus, but that's not necessarily a discussion

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for today. The Gospels, and even within Acts, they, they depict these priests as opponents,

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adversaries of, of, of Jesus and how they were coming out. And in fact,

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really the only time you saw Jesus kind of lose it, and I use that term loosely,

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kind of getting angry and confronting and just, just getting after someone, it wasn't the sinners.

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It was never the sinners that he would, he would, he would just, he would go after. It was always

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the religious leaders and the high priests and the Sanhedra. And it was the only time that you saw

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him act out in anything other than love and acceptance. And it was because of the fact

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that these people had, had taken what his father had made as pure and as holy and as this is,

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this is, you were supposed to help guide and shepherd people into the presence of God

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and you turned it into this corrupt political business and it infuriated him because he knew,

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he knew the holiness of what, what that role was meant to be. And for those who had eyes to see

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and ears to hear, they understood what Jesus was saying, that I am the way, I am the better way,

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I am, I represent what this was always, always intended to be. He was the eternal high priest.

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It was Jesus. And you know, you can almost see it in scripture when, when people's eyes were just

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opened to this. It's like, it just changed their, their world. But to those who refused and their

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hearts were so callous because this is the, and so much of it was motivated by their own self,

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self gain. I mean, these people were, were in a system that was benefiting and profiting them.

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And so part of that, that, that hatred for Jesus was coming from that, but part of it was just,

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they just don't want to see. So this gives you a little glimpse into the idea of the high priest.

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Let's look at Melchizedek. You know, in ancient Judaism, Melchizedek was kind of revered as this,

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this figure symbolizing, you know, righteous. He was not, he was not Jew. He was both a priest

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and a king, which was very, very unheard of. And, and the author, this is, this is another one of

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these little kind of cues as you read through these things. The author of Hebrews assumes

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that Jews, that the Jewish audience will know what he's talking about in this subject. You know,

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it was a, it was, from what I understand in study, I mean, it was, it was a common thing

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in rabbinic study to, to bring up this topic of, of Melchizedek. And it's mentioned, you know,

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for the first time in, in Genesis, Genesis 14, 18, 220 says, as king of Salem, meaning peace,

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and priest of God, Most High, he blesses Abram and receives a tithe from him. So Abraham, Abraham

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tithed to, to Melchizedek. Melchizedek is also mentioned in Psalms, which we'll kind of review

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in a little bit and becomes a very significant figure here in, in Hebrews. But Melchizedek was a

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foreshadowing of who Jesus was as an eternal king and his righteousness as, as a king, because that's,

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that's the other part is that in the Bible, according, according to scripture, you know,

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Melchizedek was a king and a priest. Well, guess who else is a king and a priest?

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Jesus, right? Except he's the eternal king, righteousness and peace, and he is the true

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high priest. So that, that kind of gives a little top level of, of the Levitical priesthood and,

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and Melchizedek. So I want to, I want to just kind of zero in on a few things in this,

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in that scripture that we, we read here. Two, two of the call outs here are,

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they are, are direct quotes from, from Psalm 10. And again, the author, he doesn't give the

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verses, oh, I'm taking this from Psalm, because the Jews would have known this,

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they would have recognized these scriptures. So this is a Messianic prophecy that foretells

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of the coming of a ruler greater than King David. So let's read this whole thing. It's a short,

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very short Psalm. The Lord says to my Lord, sit at my right hand until I make your enemies

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your footstool. The Lord sends forth from Zion your mighty scepter.

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Rule in the midst of your enemies. Your people will offer themselves freely on the day of your power.

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In holy garments from the womb of the morning, the dew of your path will be yours.

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And then these two verses that are pulled right verbatim out of scripture, they're grouped

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together here. The Lord has sworn and will not change his mind. You are a priest forever

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after the order of Melchizedek. So the Lord is at your right hand. He will shatter kings

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on the day of his wrath. He will execute judgment among the nations, filling them.

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The corpse says he will shatter chiefs over the wide earth and he will drink from the brook

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by the way. Therefore, he will lift up his head. So David the psalmist is describing this

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prophetic person who we know now as Jesus, as the Messiah. He is exalted,

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right? He is seated at the right hand of God in divine authority.

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He's victorious. He's a victorious ruler. His enemies will be subdued under his feet.

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He's a priest. He's declared a priest forever in the order of Melchizedek.

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He leads his holy people. He is, he eternally reigns.

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And he will be there for final judgment to crush kings of this earth and judge the nations.

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So this was prophesying about the coming Lord and Jesus. And this is another great indicator as

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to how the Jews saw this. Jesus' name wasn't tied to this. So they had no way of knowing

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when Jesus came. You know, he's the guy. He's the guy we've been reading about here. Some

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immediately saw it. Others struggled with ideas of, okay, he couldn't be this because of this.

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He couldn't be this. But they were looking for this great Messiah or Mashiach, as they would

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call him, who would fulfill. They looked at this as a militant thing. He's going to be the guy

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that comes and delivers us from all of this stuff. But this was prophesying about the Savior

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who was greater than David the writer. He proclaims that himself and greater than Melchizedek.

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The other thing I want to pick up here in this little bit of scripture is

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this section here from 18 to 21 says, for on the one hand, a former commandment is set aside

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because of its weakness and uselessness, for the law made nothing perfect. But on the other hand,

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a better hope is introduced through which we draw near to God.

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And it was not without an oath. For those who formerly became priests were made such without

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an oath. But this one was made a priest with an oath by the one who said it to him,

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the Lord has sworn and will not change his mind. You are forever a priest. So this word, oath,

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is a very unique word. See, this is what's so very different about Greek and Hebrew and the

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from a Western perspective and words just, you know, they are what they are, right?

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Well, words back then could mean things at a much deeper, deeper level, things that we just can't

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necessarily translate. That's why you see so many different types of translations out there because

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scholars really work hard at trying to get these atlas. Sometimes a word can make up this

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whole idea of something that doesn't necessarily translate into one word. So this word,

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oath, that is used here, it's pronounced, let me take a stab at this, horkimosia.

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And this is used exclusively

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by the author here. It doesn't appear anywhere else in the New Testament. The word oath does,

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but not this particular Greek version of it. So it's a unique word for oath that's used to

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emphasize this permanency, okay? This eternal nature of Jesus's priesthood. You know, this

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this grandness of it that's so much different, you know, this promise of God that comes with it

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saying, I will not change my mind on this. This is a literary style of choice that was used by

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the author. It was intended, if you're interested in digging into it, instead of reading over,

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it was intended to draw this unique attention to his priesthood, which is guaranteed by God.

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This is something, again, that is so easy to miss in scripture, especially in a book like this

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that is written, you know, by a Jew for the Jews, who were used to kind of unwrapping these things.

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There was, they would always, and this is how Jesus, this is how Jesus taught,

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it's always happy taught. So often we say, well, why didn't he say it plain?

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Why couldn't he say something so clear? Why do you always have to talk in mystery?

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Well, it's just how it was. You know, he said it himself, that if you have ears to hear,

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you will hear. If you have a desire to learn, you will dig in and understand it. Not that the surface

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value of what these teachings are isn't important, they are. But when we're willing and we desire

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to know more of God, you peel away those layers of the onion, which is what the Jews would do.

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So often it's how rabbis taught. So it's an easy point to miss. So again, yes,

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the word oath is used in other places in the scripture, but not this particular word, oath.

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So the second, the last part of this scripture that I want to tackle, meaning the ones that

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we read, we've got a little bit more to move through here, is this idea of a better covenant,

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the guarantee. He says in 22, this makes Jesus the guarantee of a better covenant. So this

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new covenant, this new way that Jesus was talking about, this fulfillment of the law,

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bringing the law into the fullness that it was already intended to be,

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God has now written this law in our hearts.

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Imagine how mind-blowing that must have been for them. Imagine this idea of, okay,

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this was the rule set in how we got to God. These are the laws, and as I said,

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thousands and thousands and thousands of laws, these are now written on our hearts.

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I don't know how it all fits there, but it's there. So the law is now not written in stone,

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but written on our hearts. Jeremiah 31, 33 says, this is the covenant I will make with the people

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of Israel. After that time, declares the Lord, I will put my law in their minds and I will write it

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on their hearts. I will be their God, and they will be my people.

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Jesus transcended from this idea of this is the law, and these are the rules, and this is how you

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follow to this idea of personal relationship with God and with him. You know, I will be their God,

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and they will be my people. This would have been a concept very foreign again to the Jews,

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this idea of universal access to God. Everybody has access.

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I mean, how awesome is that? That Jesus just provided that way, this complete forgiveness

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of sin, no matter what. Doesn't matter what you did, where you came from, who you are,

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what tribe you're from, or even if you're outside of it. None of that matters anymore,

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because God now has this eternal covenant through Christ, and we are sealed by that.

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The new covenant, this new idea, promises transformation, promises relationship, promises

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access, forgiveness, eternal security with him. It's a relational-based covenant instead of a

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transactional-based. You understand the difference? The relationship is this just

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wonderful thing, and a transaction is, okay, well, I'll do this, and it'll get me to here,

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or I'll pay this, and it'll get me there. None of that is relevant anymore.

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I want to finish out this chapter here. So, starting at 25,

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consequently, he's able to save to the utmost those who draw near to God through him,

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since he always lives to make intercession for them. For it was indeed fitting that we should

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have such a high priest, holy, innocent, unstained, separated from sinners and exalted above the

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heavens. He has no need like those high priests who offer sacrifices daily. First, for his own sins,

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and then for those of the people, since he did this once for all when he was offered,

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when he offered himself. For the law appoints men in the weakness as a high priest, but the word

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of the oath which came later than the law appoints a son who has been made perfect forever.

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So, this idea of perfection and supremacy, you know, this emphasis on this idea of, you know,

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he is able to save us to the utmost, the utmost for those who draw near to them.

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Jesus' way is better. In fact, that's what the original movement of Jesus was called,

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the way. His way is better. You know, he loves us and wants to be in relationship with us. And

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he loves us just as we are. You know, in our minds, we often think,

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yeah, you can come to God, but, you know, you got to kind of fix these things.

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You know, so we like to fix things, right? Jesus is saying, come to me. All that stuff is going to

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melt away eventually. You don't have to make a single change. Just come to him.

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He wants us to live and walk in his kingdom here on earth to do his work. He wants to partner

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with us. All throughout the Bible, from the beginning to end, is this idea of God partnering

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with humankind to do his work here. And he wants to partner with us to guide people

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to this better way, to this better place. The good news is simple. This new way is a very

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simple thing. There's not a lot of rules and regulations that go with it. Probably wasn't

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easy to be a Jew back then. It wasn't easy to be a Jew, but it's easy, easy to be a follower of

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Jesus. This good news is simple. Jesus will accept you and forgive you of all of your sins

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if you believe and confess him as Lord. John 3 16, we all know well, for God so loved the world

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that he gave his only son that whosoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.

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It doesn't say, as long as you do this, this, this, this, this, this, this, and this,

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you will have eternal life. It's not what it says at all. It says, if you believe.

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I remember the first time I heard those words and I remember vividly

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when I heard this message of this way to get to God. I mean, it just cut me. I mean, it was,

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it was, it was literally like a knife cutting through all the stuff that had accumulated in my

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life up to that point. All the hatred and the resentment and the addiction and everything

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that went along. Those words just cut. You ever, ever try to, try to, try to spread like cold

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butter on a, on toast and you're cutting through it and trying to make like soft pieces out of it?

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But then you have this like, like room temperature butter and it just glides right through. That's

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to, to a point where it, on the spot, on that moment, changed everything. It changed everything

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for me. It's such a simple, simple message of this good news. And what about the law?

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Well, you know what? Jesus summed that up. He summed up the old covenant. He summed up

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all of those thousands and thousands and thousands and thousands and thousands of law.

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He summed it all up in Matthew 22, 37 to 40. And he said, simply this,

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love the Lord your God with all your heart and soul and mind.

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This is the first and most important commandment. The second most important is like this, this one.

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And it is love others as much as you love yourself. All of the laws of Moses and the

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books of the prophets, everything is summed up into this. And if the worship team could,

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could come forward. This was what Jesus came to tell. And this is what was so complex and hard

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for the people to understand. Because you know what? We, we love, even as, even as, as, as,

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as Westerners, we love system and we love process. Do you ever notice with kids,

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you know, they, they, they crave rules and they crave discipline. It's in our nature

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to love process and the simplicity of this message that Jesus brought, the simplicity

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of this new way that Jesus brought was almost like, this is just too good to be true

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for so many. How can this possibly be true that he is our eternal advocate now.

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He has a better way for us and all we have to do is come to him humbly.

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For me, how I look at it, this is really, really, really, really good news. Right?

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If this is news to any of you out there and you want to know more,

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or if, if, if, if the God's Spirit has cut through you, like it cut through me in a way,

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even if it was just kind of like a little nick, come up afterwards. There's people up here that

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will pray with you, give you a little bit of guidance along the way. Jesus, we thank you,

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Lord, for this new way. We thank you, God, that you loved us so, so much, God,

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that you gave of yourself fully beyond what we could ever, ever imagine doing. You gave it freely

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and you did it to provide this clear pathway to the Father where we can experience that kind of

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love and acceptance that we've really never known here on earth and, and may never, ever know here,

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here on earth, but you provided that way for us, God, and all you want from us, all you want, God,

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is for us to come to you. You want to be in relationship with us. That's all you want.

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You want to partner with us, God, to show others this better way, this kingdom way of living.

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And, Lord, we are so thankful, God, for what you've done for us.

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We give you all the glory, God, in Jesus' name, amen.

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Thanks for joining us at Lansdale Life Church as we praise God and discuss His Word. Don't forget

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to join us for Worship Live Sunday mornings at 10 a.m. Eastern on YouTube.

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Be blessed and have a great day!