January 29, 2017: Such a Great Salvation

Hebrews series 3

Text: Hebrews 2:10

I had plans to complete this chapter in two weeks but just could not move past verse 10. It contains such rich Gospel truth and comfort for us, I want to unpack this verse by itself. Two primary truths that will lead us in to Communion: bringing us to glory and our Savior being made perfect through suffering. Through the valleys and heartaches of life, this is not our home. We are citizens of heaven and merely pilgrims passing through. And the only pathway toward this reconciliation and heavenly inheritance is through the suffering of the Son - how seriously do we view our sin? Charles Spurgeon  reminds us not to belittle the "lesser sins", for which Christ suffered and died in order to redeem us. 

January 15, 2017: The Slow Drift

Hebrews series message 2

Text: Hebrews 2:1-9

After the brilliant display of Christ's glory in chapter one, the author entreats us to pay attention - close attention- to what we've heard. We need to make and keep the Gospel central in our hearts. If we have not embraced Christ as Savior, we must seal the deal. If we are a Christ follower, that's a daily decision. By nature, we drift...we drift from the truth and we drift from our convictions. He's calling on us to reject passivity and to be intentional about what we believe. There's broad application both in evangelism and also discipleship. One 1/22 Jason will follow up and cast a vision from the elders regarding prioritizing evangelism  from II Corinthians 5. 

 

January 8, 2017: He Stands Alone Pt. 2

Hebrews series message 1 part 2

Text: Hebrews 1:4-14

How important is it...really...for people to believe in Jesus? Don't all paths lead to truth (if there even is such a thing)? Do we need to share the Gospel with our neighbors, colleagues and family? Isn't it arrogant to expect others to change their worldview when they're perfectly happy as they are? As we conclude Hebrews 1 we encounter some heavy theology - shock and awe - as our author convincingly makes the case that Christ is superior to even the angels. It is this Christology that speaks well to the aforementioned question.