Hebrews 1:2-3 The Supremacy of Christ

 

The central message of the Book of Hebrews is “Consider Christ.” In the first half of Hebrews 1:2, consider why He came. That is, He is God’s final word. Then, in the second half of verse 2 and into verse 3, we see who He is through seven characteristics of the incomparable Christ. So as we take up our study of Hebrews 1:2-3 we joyfully affirm that the best thing we can do is to preach Jesus Christ! This great text will allow nothing else. The grand theme of these verses is the supremacy of Christ as God’s final word. Christ is held up like a great jewel to the sunlight of God’s revelation, and as the light courses through it, seven facets flash with gleaming brilliance. We have given these facets names so they can be easily followed and assimilated. Christ is: Inheritor, Creator, Sustainer, Radiator, Representor, Purifier, and Ruler.

Inheritor: It is natural for the writer to first emphasize that Christ the Son is the Inheritor because sons are naturally heirs. Thus the text naturally flows from sonship to heirship (v. 2a). The writer, in stating here that Jesus is “the heir of all things,” is also consciously identifying him with the Lord’s “Anointed” and “Son” in Psalm 2. Thus Jesus is specifically said to be heir to Planet Earth and its peoples. But the promise also embraces the universe and the world to come. The immense scope of Christ’s inheritance comes from His dual functions as Creator and Redeemer. As Creator of the universe, He is its natural heir. Scripture is clear: everything in the physical universe is for Him and to Him and will consummate in Him as heir of a new creation. But in addition to His natural inheritance as Creator, as Redeemer He has also earned a vast inheritance of souls renewed through His atoning work of reconciliation on the cross. We are His inheritance! This is a mind-boggling truth, to say the least.

Creator: Having introduced the Son’s superiority as Inheritor of all things, the thought naturally moves to His supremacy as the Creator of all (v. 2b). The stupendous creative power of Christ created every speck of dust in the hundred thousand million galaxies of what we know of the ever expanding universe. Jesus was the agent in whom and through whom the entire universe of space and time was created. Everything was created by Him – everything corporeal, all things incorporeal, everything substantial, all things insubstantial.

Sustainer: But not only is He Creator, He is also Sustainer (v.3c). He is not passively upholding the universe, He is actively holding up all things. He does this by His spoken word. Just as the universe was called into existence with a spoken word, so it is sustained by the utterance of the Son. We cannot create the tiniest speck of dust; much less a mayfly, but He created the universe. He can do what we can never do, materially and spiritually. He can create in us clean hearts (Ps. 51:10). In fact, He can make us into new creations (2 Cor. 5:17). He can do it out of nothing. He can take whatever you are – your nothingness – and create a new person. There is nothing in your soul that is beyond the creative power of God. You are not an exception to His creativity, no matter how unique you may imagine yourself or your problem to be. But He is also our Sustainer. He can sustain the universe; He can sustain the struggling, harried church. Jesus is adequate for everything.

Radiator: The fourth facet of the Son’s superiority brilliantly sets forth His relation to the Father (v. 3a). The ESV translation “radiance” here is proper, as against some others that use “reflection.” Jesus does not simply reflect God’s glory; He is part of it! This is shown on the Mount of Transfiguration (Mark 9:3). It is His own essential glory, but it was also the Father’s. This is what blinded Paul on the Damascus Road (Acts 9:3).

Representor: The following phrase balances out His identity by emphasizing that He is also the Representor of God: “and the exact imprint of His nature” (v. 3b). The word translated “exact imprint” refers to the image on a coin that perfectly corresponds to the image on the die. Jesus is therefore completely the same in being as the Father. However, there is still an important distinction – both exist separately, as do the die and its image. Jesus is a superior revelation of God. When we see Him, we know just what the God of the universe is like. We know how He thinks. We know how He talks. We know how He relates to people. God has spoken in His Son. It is His ultimate communication, His final word, His consummate eloquence. Oh, the superiority of the Son!

Purifier: We have been all over the universe with the cosmic Son, and then suddenly He is introduced as the priestly Purifier who paid for our sins with His own blood. The thought almost sounds an aside – “After making purification for sins” (v. 3d). Ceaseless cosmic activity and then boom, His once-and-for-all sacrifice for our sins! Actually this a cosmic achievement because Jesus did something no man or priest could ever do: offer alone the sacrifice that paid for all sins. That had to be the work of a cosmic being!

Ruler: The immensity of His cosmic achievement is given perspective by the phrase that follows: “He sat down at the right hand of the Majesty on high” (v. 3e). He is Ruler. The overarching significance here is that priests never sat down. Levitical priests always were standing, because no sacrifice was complete. But Jesus, a high priest after the order of Melchizedek, sat down (Heb. 10:11-12). From the cross Jesus shouted, “It is finished” (John 19:30) and then, reassured, took His seat forever. Jesus’ colossal work underlines the utter blasphemy of the thought that we can pay for our own sins with works of righteousness. There is only one way to purity, and that is the blood of Christ. The only way to justification is by faith in His blood (Rom. 3:25; 5:9). Lastly, there is the ultimate significance of Jesus’ sitting down at the right hand of the Majesty in Heaven – and that is His ruling exaltation! It is here, in this supreme exaltation at God’s right hand, that Christ intercedes for us (see Rom. 8:34). The thought is utterly sublime but true – this glorious cosmic being at the apex of is splendor is praying for you and me! Can it really be? Yes! God’s Word says it is so.

Hebrews 1:2-3 Reflection questions:

How are you preaching Christ daily?

Do you see why we can do no better than to preach Jesus Christ?

Do you know this Son? Has His eloquence spoken to you? He is God’s final word. There is no other!

Hebrews 1:1-2a The Eloquence of God

 

The Book of Hebrews was written to a group of Jewish Christians whose world was falling apart. Scholars tentatively propose that the letter was written to a small house-church of beleaguered Jewish Christians living in Rome in the mid-sixties before the destruction of the Jewish Temple. Fifteen years after Claudius expelled the Jews from Rome a new persecution looms; the Neronian persecution that would come with the great fire of Rome in AD 64. No one has been killed yet but verse 4 of chapter 12 raises the possibility that martyrdom may come soon. The writer of Hebrews was writing to admonish and encourage his friends, a small group of Jewish Christians who were scared stiff! Some had begun to avoid contact with outsiders. Some had even withdrawn from the worshiping community altogether (10:25). The author feared there might be those who, if arrested, would succumb to the conditions of release – a public denial of Christ (6:6, 10:29). The tiny house-church was asking some hard questions: Did God know what was going on? If so, how could this be happening to them? Did He care? Only God could protect them, but where was He? Why did He not answer? Why the silence of God? The letter arrived and the word was sent out for the congregation to gather. The reader began what has been called the most impressive piece of Greek in the New Testament; verses 1-2a. Through these magnificent words the beleaguered church was brought face to face with the God who speaks – the eloquence of God. God spoke in the past, and He speaks in the present in His Son. And this eloquence, the ultimate eloquence of the final word in God’s Son, would bring them comfort in the midst of life’s troubles.

Even before the prophets of old, the cosmos was filled with God’s eloquence. The vastness and precision of our cosmos declares the necessity of a magnificent God! Noting the order and design of our universe, Kepler – the founder of modern astronomy, discoverer of the “Three Planetary Laws of Motion,” and originator of the term satellite – said, “The undevout astronomer is mad.” The cosmic eloquence of God is deafening, but many will not hear it. And even those who hear, hear partially. As Job said, “Behold, these are but the outskirts of His ways, and how small a whisper do we hear of Him! But the thunder of His power who can understand?” (Job 26:14). The eloquence of God is always there for the believer willing to hear it. So often those who have heard it best have heard it when life was darkest – perhaps while persecuted or in prison.

God’s people have always had more than the eloquence of the heavens, for they have had the prophets (v. 1).The emphasis here is on the grand diversity of God’s speech in the Old Testament. God utilized great devices to instruct His prophets. God spoke to Moses at Sinai in thunder and lightning and with the voice of a trumpet. He whispered to Elijah at Horeb in “a still small voice.” Ezekiel was informed by visions and Daniel through dreams. God appeared to Abram in human form and to Jacob as an angel. God declared Himself by Law, by warning, by exhortation, by type, by parable. And when God’s seers prophesied, they utilized nearly every method to communicate their message. The significance of this immensely creative variegated communication is that it dramatically demonstrated God’s loving desire to communicate with His people. Through God’s cosmic and prophetic eloquence men and women rose to live life on the highest plane. But in all of this (its adequacy, its progressiveness, its continuity, its power), God’s eloquence was never complete. As grand as it was, it was nevertheless fragmentary and lacking.

But no more! For in Christ came an astonishing eloquence, the ultimate speech of God (v. 2a).Jesus is the ultimate medium of communication. God has spoken to us in His Son! This amazing eloquence of God is substantially the same as that described in the chain of thought in John 1, which begins, “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God” (John 1:1). Jesus here, of course, is “the Word,” and though much more can be said about this term because of its rich history in Greek literature, its main significance here is that Christ has always sought to reveal Himself. Through the Incarnation God wrote Himself into life – “The Word became flesh and dwelt among us” (John 1:14). He put skin on, so to speak. He made it possible for us to know Him as we never before could. God in the flesh was the height of communication. What was the result of all this eloquence? We meet God the Father! “No one has ever seen God,” says John, but “the only God, who is at the Father’s side, He has made Him known” (John 1:18). Jesus interpreted God. That is some communication! The astounding eloquence of God!

Hebrews 1:1-2a Reflection Questions:

Have you ever asked yourself the same questions as the tiny house-church did?

Have you discovered the eloquence of God to answer those questions?

How does God speak to you personally? How often do you hear Him?

Introduction to the Book of Hebrews

 

By way of introduction, I would like you to note three things about this fabulous Book of Hebrews: Its author, its audience, and its argument.

The Author: Debates have raged for almost two thousand years concerning the author of this book. Many scholars believe it to be Luke while others insist the orator Apollos. It could be Apollos or it could be Luke. One thing, however, is certain: Whoever penned this epistle had an intense understanding of theology combined with an immense Greek vocabulary. And these two factors point me personally to the apostle Paul. Not only did Paul’s brilliant mind give him a greater grasp of the Greek language than any other man throughout history, but his understanding of Old Testament theology was unrivaled as well. In a greater sense, though, the question of authorship doesn’t really matter, for truly, God is the author of Hebrews ultimately.

The Audience: The Book of Hebrews was addressed to Jewish believers who were being pulled back into Judaism. Living in Jerusalem, no doubt each time they heard the trumpets sounding from the courtyard of the temple, reminded of their heritage and history, they found themselves drawn back into the religion and rituals of the Levitical system. Jesus came to establish a New Covenant, the New Testament. That is why there are very sober warnings throughout the book.

The Argument: The argument of the Book of Hebrews is that Jesus Christ is superior to the old way of religion. He is superior in His majesty because, as the Son of God, He is superior to angels, to Moses, to Joshua, and the entire Levitical system. And He is superior in ministry because, as the Son of Man, He died for us. He relates to us. He works with us.

I think you are going to be blessed greatly in the study of this book because the theme and message is to point out the sufficiency and beauty of Jesus – always a grand endeavor. Expanding souls encounter an expanding Christ! And this is why I am particularly enthused about this study volume on the Book of Hebrews, for that epistle has a double dose of growth-producing power – first, because it presents the greatness of Christ as no other New Testament writing does, and, second, because it repeatedly demands a response from the reader. Seriously considered, Hebrews will make us grow and find a bigger Christ.

*The material for these studies is from Jon Courson’s Commentary by Thomas Nelson Inc., R. Kent Hughes Preaching the Word series by Crossway, and Warren W. Wiersbe’s Commentary by Chariot Victor Publishing, unless otherwise noted.

Isaiah 29:1-24 Fire in the Fireplace

 

There is no doubt that Ariel in verses 1,2 and 7 is a code word for Jerusalem, described in more familiar terms in verse 1 as the city where David settled and in verse 8 as Mount Zion. In fact it is this sustained focus on Jerusalem/Zion which unifies this first part of the chapter. But Ariel appears to be a term which Isaiah has used for his own purposes at this point, since it is not used as a name for Jerusalem anywhere else in the book or, for that matter, in the entire Bible. It must bear, in a very pointed way, on the specific message which Isaiah is delivering in these particular verses. It means “a hearth” or, more specifically, “an altar hearth” – the flat surface of the altar on which a fire was lit to consume the sacrifices. It alludes to Jerusalem as the religious center of the nation, the place where the temple was situated and the Lord was worshiped, especially through the offering of sacrifices. But the word as Isaiah uses it has a terrible barb in it, for it also foreshadows the judgment that the Lord is going to bring on the city (v. 2). That is, the Lord is going to light another kind of fire in Jerusalem, the fire of His judgment, and when he does so the entire city will be like one vast blazing altar hearth. Jerusalem was heading for a flaming judgment because it was on a collision course with the Lord.

Sometimes we need to hear old truths in a new way if they are to shock us out of our complacency and stir us in needed action. The foolish notion that the externals of religious observance can of themselves protect us from God’s judgment in one that the Old Testament prophets attack again and again. Isaiah has already done so in 1:12-17, and will do so again later in the chapter in verses 13-14. He is not saying anything new here, but hammering home a familiar message in a particularly vivid manner. False religion is the very worst kind of pride because it attempts to make God our servant instead of recognizing that we are His servant. Isaiah predicts that the effect of the Lord’s judgment will be to reduce proud Jerusalem to the most abject weakness and helplessness (v. 4) before He at last turns His judgment (flames of a devouring fire) against her enemies (vv. 5-8).

Now the focus sharpens again so that we can take a closer look at its people. The picture that is drawn is damning: they are blind, drunk and stunned (vv. 9-10) – and this is both their own choice and God’s judgment on them. The “vision” or revelation of God’s purposes that has been given to them through Isaiah has become like a sealed scroll to them (vv. 11-12), and for all of this it is the religious leaders who are principally to blame. In view of what has gone before we might have expected Isaiah to single out the priests. Instead he lays the major blame at the feet of the prophets and the seers (vv. 10, 14). These were the people who, in a crises situation, should have been able to bring a contemporary word of revelation or wise counsel to bear. But instead of being people of insight who might have cut through to the heart of the problem, they had deliberately fallen in with the establishment and pursued a course which they knew the Lord disapproved of. This is why they hide their plans from the Lord and do their work in the dark where they foolishly pretend that God cannot see them (v. 15). In order to justify their actions they have to deny God’s right to tell them what to do and, by implication, claim that it is they who are wise and He (their Maker!) who knows nothing(v. 16): all of this (take note) while retaining their religious titles and the meticulous observation of the externals.

To rectify the situation the Lord will have to take drastic action and this is exactly what is signified by the “Therefore” of verse 14. This kind of language is regularly used in the Old Testament of the mighty acts of God, works of such a nature that only God Himself could be the doer of them. What the Lord will do about the present situation will be just as “wonderful” as His deliverance of the Israelites from Egypt. But it will be far less pleasant for the present generation, for it is not a foreign tyrant that they are enslaved to but their own foolish wisdom. That is what the Lord must destroy if they are to be free (v. 14b), and we have already seen earlier in the chapter the means that He will use. The outcome, as Isaiah describes it in verses 17-21, will be a complete reversal of the present situation. The deaf will hear and the blind will se, so that the scroll of the divine revelation will no longer be sealed (v. 18). The proud will be abased and the meek exalted, and instead of the empty, insincere worship of verse 13 there will be a heartfelt, joyful praise to the Lord, the Holy One of Israel (vv. 19-21). The final paragraph sums up the great reversal and points to its significance: it will mean that everything that the Lord had in mind when He “redeemed Abraham” (by calling him out of pagan idolatry) so long ago will finally be a reality. God will be honored and worshiped by a people who no longer trust their own wisdom but humbly rely on His (vv. 23-24).

Isaiah 29:1-24 Reflection Questions:

Why does God abhor the externals of religious observance? Give one New Testament example where Jesus deals with it.

Do you know God? I mean really know Him not just knowing about Him. Do you have a real personal relationship with Jesus like you may have with your family, wife/husband, children, or best friend?

Why do you think the religious leaders contradicted the faith in God (Hypocrisy)? How did Jesus deal with this?

Are you still relying on your own wisdom instead of humbly relying on God’s?