Fixing Our Eyes on Jesus - The Letter to the Hebrews
Lanse Evangelical Free Church
May 17, 2026 :: Hebrews 6:4-12
Don’t miss the point of this passage. Don’t miss what the writer is trying to do to his original readers and to us as we read it today. Don’t miss the point of this passage. It’s easy to get lost in the weeds.
A number of you have told me that you’re looking forward to the sermon on this particular section of Hebrews because you have questions.
You’re not alone. This is one of the most difficult passages in the New Testament to interpret and to harmonize with the rest of our theology. Biblical scholars and faithful theologians have debated it for centuries. There are a lot of weeds to get lost in.
And it’s very heavy. It’s not just tricky. It’s scary. The author paints a very provocative and horrifying picture with strong and potentially terrifying words.
And that’s on purpose. He has something incredibly important to say to these folks, and he does not mince words to get it out. But he has a reason for it, and it’s not just to shock them, and it’s certainly not to confuse them.
Don’t miss the point of this passage. And the point is:
Fix your eyes on Jesus.
And don’t stop fixing your eyes on Jesus. Don’t turn away from fixing your eyes on Jesus. Or else.
[VIDEO WILL BE EMBEDDED HERE.]
I’ve pulled the title for this message from verse 9 where it starts, “Even though we speak like this...”
He’s very aware of how strong his words are. This pastor knows that he is speaking in a very provocative way.
“We speak like this...”
He pulls out all the stops. He cranks it to 11. He types in all caps, underlined, and italics in 50pt font.
“We speak like this...” For a good reason.
Last week, we said that he was like a wise mom who uses a proper scolding at the right time to bump her kids into listening once again. This pastor was concerned that these primarily Jewish professing Christians had become “slow to listen.” Lazy. Sluggish. Dull. They had potentially stopped even trying to understand and grow.
And he was worried that they were stuck in a perpetual spiritual infancy and not going on to maturity. It seemed like they were baby Christians still nursing when they should have been eating solid food and feeding it to others. And maybe even going backwards.
He did not like their general spiritual trajectory. If they stayed on this course, it could lead to spiritual disaster.
Is it good to yell at somebody? It can be if they are headed towards disaster. If you are watching someone with headphones on walk backwards into a busy street or maybe over a steep cliff, it would be bad to not yell!
“We speak like this...” When there is danger. And rightly so. And this pastor senses some real potential danger for these people. If they keep on this downward track and don’t pull up, they might not be able to come back from it. And so he speaks like this.
Pull up! Don’t go there! Fix your eyes on Jesus. And don’t fall away.
I have just two points of application this morning, and like last week, they are basically two sides of the same coin. Here’s number one. We speak like this:
#1. TO WARN YOU TO NOT FALL AWAY.
To warn you to not fall away from trusting in Jesus. Because there comes a point for some people when they fall away that they can never come back.
It’s impossible. The first word in the original Greek of the long sentence of verses 4 through 6 is “impossible.” It can’t be done. It’s out of the question. He grabs their attention with that word “impossible,” but doesn’t say what is impossible until down in verse 6! He holds them in suspense. Look at verse 4.
“It is impossible for those who have once been enlightened, who have tasted the heavenly gift, who have shared in the Holy Spirit, who have tasted the goodness of the word of God and the powers of the coming age, [it is impossible] if they fall away, to be brought back to repentance...”
You see how heavy and how scary this is? He’s saying that for some people there is a point of no return...to God and therefore to God’s salvation. “[It is impossible...] if they fall away, to be brought back to repentance...”
Now, I know you have questions. So do I. But don’t miss the point. Don’t miss what this pastor is trying to do to us. He’s trying to warn us to not fall away. So the application is to not fall away! Fix your eyes on Jesus and keep them there. Don’t miss the point.
Before we get to the questions that we all want to ask, notice what he does not say.
He does not say that they have fallen away. He does not say that they have reached that point of no return. If they had, this would be a very different letter. He might not even be bothering to send them a letter.
Notice that he uses the words, “they” here and not “you” or “we.” He’s big on “you” and “we,” and is going to return to them in verses 9 through 12. But here he’s laying a scenario for them. He’s not saying that this is them, but he’s laying out this scenario so that they don’t go there. It’s a warning. He speaks like this to warn them to not fall away.
Notice also that he never says that God will reject anyone who genuinely repents. He never says that. The Bible never says that. What does it say about repentance in verse 6? It’s impossible for these people to repent. It’s impossible for these people to be “brought back to repentance.” They are unable to repent of their unrepentance.
But anyone who does repent genuinely in this life will be received. Jesus said, “Whoever comes to me, I will never drive away” (John 6:37).
But some people reach a point, where they will never come to Him and never come back Him. And for them, there is nothing to be done. It’s impossible.
Now, the big question everybody always asks here is...what?
Who are these people? Who are these people whom it’s impossible to bring back to repentance?
Because it sure seems like he’s describing genuine Christians who fall away. And if that’s true, does that mean that a genuine Christian can lose their salvation?
Genuine faithful Christians have disagreed about that question for many centuries. The Christians in this room may come to different answers on that question, and that’s okay.
What we don’t want to do is to decide what the passage says before we read it carefully. We don’t want to simply import our theology into a passage or force our theology upon it. We want every passage of Scripture to have its own say.
At the same time, we believe that God does not contradict Himself, and that His Scriptures are internally coherent. So at the end of the day, we have to synthesize and harmonize everything that the Scripture does say to build up our consistent theology from all of the things that it clearly says. Does that make sense?
So who are these doomed people? I think it’s really interesting that there is a debate. That there is a question. Some people feel really strongly that it’s obvious, but most people point out that there is some vagueness here. Perhaps intentionally. There is no slam dunk.
I resonate with those who think that verses 4 and 5 describe a genuine Christian.
Read it like that. They are (v.4) “...those who have once been enlightened [they had the Light of the World shine on their hearts], who have tasted the heavenly gift [the gift of salvation? And the word “tasted” doesn’t always mean just a nibble. Remember chapter 2 said that Jesus “tasted” death (same word), and He didn’t just munch on the edges of death. He tasted the whole thing and swallowed it down.], who have shared in the Holy Spirit [Who has a share in the Spirit but real Christians?], who have tasted [same word] the goodness of the word of God and the powers of the coming age...” It sounds like citizens of the kingdom that has started now and is going to go on forever.
That sounds like genuine Christians.
And (v.6) “if they fall away...” or literally “and they fall away...” Does that mean that genuine Christians can fall away? If this was the only passage of Scripture that I had, I would probably come to that conclusion. And it could be.
Notice that if it is true that a genuine Christian can fall away and lose their salvation, they also lose their ability to come back to salvation.
“[It is impossible...] if they fall away, to be brought back to repentance...”
Once apostatized, always apostatized.
Now, I personally don’t think that a genuine Christian can fall away and lose their genuine salvation.
And that’s based mostly on other passages of holy Scripture. There are so many that seem to teach to me that once a person has genuine saving faith that God will so preserve them that they most certainly will reach heaven.
One of my favorites is in John chapter 10 when Jesus, the Good Shepherd says, “My sheep listen to my voice; I know them, and they follow me. I give them eternal life, and they shall never perish; no one can snatch them out of my hand. My Father, who has given them to me, is greater than all; no one can snatch them out of my Father's hand” (John 10:27-29).
We are safe in Jesus’ hand in the Father’s hand. Unsnatchable.
There are so many more passages like that.
And there are plenty in the Letter to the Hebrews. In the very next chapter, when he gets back to teaching about how Jesus is our great high priest, he points out that because Jesus lives forever, His priesthood is forever. And he says, “because Jesus lives forever, he has a permanent priesthood. Therefore he is able to save completely those who come to God through him, because he always lives to intercede for them” (Hebrews 7:24b-25).
If you come to Him, Jesus is able to save you completely. To the uttermost.
This book emphasizes how perfect Jesus’ priesthood is and therefore how powerful. His sacrifice is perfect and completely saves all who genuinely come to Him.
Or in chapter 10, also about His great high priesthood, it says, “...by one sacrifice [Jesus] has made perfect forever those who are being made holy” (10:14).
So for me and my theology, it’s once truly saved, always truly saved.
But, we can’t always tell who is truly saved. There are a lot of professing Christians who turn out to not be possessing Christians. There are a lot of fake Christians who can seem very real.
A number of theologians that I highly respect think that’s who verses 4 through 6 are talking about. Fake Christians. Or we might say, “Almost Christians.”
Let’s go through verses 4 through 6 again, and see how that would read:
Verse 4: “It is impossible for those who have once been enlightened [they had some light, but that doesn’t necessarily mean that they came into the light themselves], who have tasted the heavenly gift [maybe that is just a nibble? Maybe it’s talking about the Lord’s Supper? Some fake Christians do that. Or if this is like those who died in the wilderness that we read about in chapters 3 and 4, it was the manna and yet they didn’t enter the promised land], who have shared in the Holy Spirit [That’s the hardest one, but maybe it means that they have been a part of a work of the Spirit, present during revival, seeing from the outside the blessings that the Spirit bestows on the people around them and getting the blessed in the overflow], who have tasted the goodness of the word of God and the powers of the coming age...”
You know, there is a way of reading those words that just sounds like someone who has been around church a lot. Someone who has made a profession of faith, but it was only skin deep. It wasn’t the real heart change.
You know who it reminds me of? Judas Iscariot. He was so close! He followed the Light of the World. He probably did miracles in the name of Jesus. It doesn’t he didn’t in those passages where they were all sent out and came back successful. He tasted “the powers of the coming age.” But I don’t think he was ever genuinely saved.
He was so close, but he was also so far away. And then he betrayed Jesus, and he could not find his way back. Judas was seized with remorse, but he did not repent. He went out and hung himself. He did not turn back (like Peter did).
I think it’s likely that at least some of the people to whom this letter was written were like Judas. Not yet Christians, almost but not quite, and if they were to fall away, there would be no coming back.
“You have experienced all of these blessings, got so close, and then to turn your back on the whole thing?!”
Because that’s what it means to “fall away.” This is not just sinning (as bad as that is) or even “backsliding” which is worse, but apostatizing.
Deliberately, decisively, finally, fully rejecting Jesus. Repudiating Him. Perhaps under persecution. It’s turning your back on Him, and rejecting Him. Rejecting Jesus!
Do you see why they can’t be renewed to repentance? Look at verse 6.
“...because to their loss they are crucifying the Son of God all over again and subjecting him to public disgrace.”
They have repented of their repentance. They have changed their mind about Jesus and have decided that, “Yeah, Jesus does belong up on that cross! He deserves it. He’s not taking my place. He’s not my great high priest. I’ll go back to Levitical priests. Let Jesus be shamed. Let Jesus be damned!"
This is not a sin of ignorance. This is sinning against the light. This is knowing better and having gone along with it for so long, and then choosing the opposite and turning your back on Jesus.
And you know what’s impossible? It’s impossible for Jesus to die again. He cannot die again. He’s indestructible now. “...because to their loss they are crucifying the Son of God all over again and subjecting him to public disgrace.” No, they cannot come back.
In verse 7, the writer turns to an illustration from the world of agriculture. He talks about two kinds of farms. Verse 7.
“Land that drinks in the rain often falling on it and that produces a crop useful to those for whom it is farmed receives the blessing of God. [As it should be. You get these amazing blessings of verses 4 and 5 and the good soil drinks it in and produces a fruitful harvest. That’s a picture of how it should be. V.8] But land that produces thorns and thistles is worthless and is in danger of being cursed. In the end it will be burned.”
That’s these people who have been given so much blessing. So much “rain” from the Holy Spirit, from being around the people of God, from being so close. But if there is no good fruit, it was all worthless. It’s the same “rain” that falls on both kinds of people. But some people take in all of that external blessing, and their hearts are not actually changed. Instead of eternal salvation, they have eternal damnation, and rightly so.
Now, there is a third way of reading this passage that I have come to appreciate in the last few years.
And it’s a little different from the other two that I have been talking about.
It’s this. In this third view, many of the people of verse 4 through 6 are genuine Christians who if they did fall away would not be able to return, but because they are genuine Christians, they will hear this warning and heed this warning and not fall away.
You could say that it’s like a hypothetical, but it’s actually stronger than that. The warning isn’t just hypothetical. It’s real. But if a real Christian hears this real warning, they will really persevere. They will pull up.
Do you remember when the Apostle Paul was in that shipwreck in Acts chapter 27? And he said that God said that they would all safely reach the shore? Not one of them would be lost. Only the ship.
But he also said that the sailors shouldn’t try to escape and leave the landlubbers behind. If they did, then the sailors would be lost.
So, which is it? Would they be lost if they did that or will all of them reach the shore? It’s both, right? Both are true. They had to hear the warning and heed the warning and they did, and they were safe.
I think maybe that’s what’s going on here with these warnings in Hebrews.
Some fake “almost” Christians will hear it, and some will repent and become real genuine Christians. They will not fall away.
Some fake “almost” Christians will hear the warning and ignore the warning, and they will be doomed.
But real genuine Christians, those who perhaps have been sloughing off, will hear this warning and because he’s speaking like this, they will turn away from turning way before it’s too late!
Now, don’t miss the point. In a very real way, it does not matter a whit who these people are in verses 4 through 6. Whether they are genuine Christians or not.
What matters is that he is speaking like this about these people to the Hebrews to warn the Hebrews to not fall away. And he is warning us today. Do not repent of your repentance. Don’t even try to find out if a genuine Christian can lose their salvation. Fix your eyes on Jesus. Don’t even flirt with being the thorny, thistly farmland.
Remember, the point of this passage is not abstract theology. This is a sermon. This is theology that is supposed to move you. Heed the warning.
I’m sure you have questions about all of this. I’m sure I haven’t answered all of them.
Some of you are worried that maybe you have committed the unpardonable sin. That you have fallen away. If you are worried that you have, then you almost certainly have not. If you love Jesus and are following Him by faith, you have not. If you can repent, you have not. Those who have fallen away in Hebrews 6 way, cannot be brought back to repentance. It’s impossible. So if you can repent, this is not describing you.
But if you are not repentant, then you should be worried.
This warning is for you if you have been blessed to hear the gospel and come to church over and over again, and now you are headed out the door? Turning your back on Jesus?
I know it’s hard. The world hates you and is putting all kinds of pressure on you. It’s hard to follow Jesus. These people were feeling it. None of them had died yet, but some had gone to prison.
It’s surprisingly easy to turn your back on Jesus. The world laughs at us. All of a sudden what we believe doesn’t seems so plausible. It’s easier to go with the flow. But if you do, you will be crucifying the Son of God all over again and subjecting him to public disgrace. Don’t do it. Don’t fall away. Fix your eyes on Jesus.
Some of you are worried for your loved ones who once made a profession of faith and claimed to be Christians and are not walking with Christ right now. It is right to be concerned for them. This passage does not tell us if they will return or not. It doesn’t give us false hope, but it doesn’t tell us that they are inevitably doomed either.
Many prodigals do come home, praise God. Pray for it. Pray for that with all you heart! And what you pray is that they repent. Because anyone who does repent genuinely in this life will be received. Jesus said, “Whoever comes to me, I will never drive away” (John 6:37).
But it is possible that some of our loved ones will not come to Him in the end, and that is so very scary. Because we are not all going to get to heaven. When the roll is called up yonder, not all of us are going to be there. Only those who repent and fix their eyes on Jesus.
So if you have a good opportunity, warn your loved ones, too. Because it is loving to speak like this.
Number two: We speak like this to warn you to not fall away and...
#2. TO ENCOURAGE YOU TO MAKE YOUR HOPE SURE.
Look at verse 9.
“Even though we speak like this, dear friends, we are confident of better things in your case–things that accompany salvation.”
Ohhhh. That is so good to hear, isn’t it?! He calls them “dear friends” or “beloved.” The Greek word is “agapaytoi” which the Apostle Paul uses all the time when he’s writing the churches, but this is the only time that Hebrews uses it. Right where it is needed most.
He has just given them one of the scariest warnings ever, and now he gives them one of the sweetest encouragements ever.
“Even though we speak like this [with terrifying warnings that must be heard], dear [dear, dear] friends [beloved], we are confident of better things in your case [than Better things that curses and burning, than damnation. We are confident of ]–things that accompany salvation.” Eternal salvation!
He believes that his warning will work, and that they are not ultimately going to be in danger.
Remember, he has never said that any of them have fallen away. Just what would happen if they did. He has switched to “they” back to “you” and to “we.” He doesn’t think they are bunch of Judases. He thinks they are more like a bunch of Simon Peters.
Why? Because of the past, the present, and what he wants for their future. Look at verse 10.
“God is not unjust; he will not forget your work and the love you have shown him as you have helped his people and continue to help them.”
This pastor knows their history. He knows that there is plenty of evidence that they are genuine Christians from their past. They have worked. They have labored for the Lord. And He saw it, and He will not forget it. Double negative there. “God is NOT Unjust.” In other words, He is just. He is justice itself. And if God can see that they are real, they have nothing to worry about.
He says they have shown love to Him. Literally “in His name.” There is evidence that they are real deal. They have loved God as they have loved His people. V.10 “as you have helped his people (the saints) and continue to help them.”
They are still doing it. At present. They may have grown kind of sluggish, but they are still doing some ministry.
Are you working for the Lord?
Are you loving in His name?
Are you helping His people?
That’s good evidence that you are real. Keep it up. That’s what he says. Past, present, and here’s the future. Verse 11.
“We want each of you to show this same diligence to the very end, in order to make your hope sure. We do not want you to become lazy, but to imitate those who through faith and patience inherit what has been promised.”
We don’t speak like this to spook you. Unless you need spooked! And we don’t want you to stay spooked. We want to urge you, spur you, encourage you to keep on keeping on “to the very end.”
And as you do that, you will see the realization of your hope. When the roll is called up yonder, you will be there.
“Each one of you.” Did you see that in verse 11? We want each of you...to stick with Jesus. We don’t want anyone to fall by the wayside.
That’s my heart for all of you. It breaks my pastor-heart know that there are people I’ve preached to and shepherded and shared the goodness of the word of God who have fallen away and won’t be there when we all get to heaven.
Don’t let that be you! Show this same diligence, zeal, earnestness you had before to make your hope sure. Do not become lazy. That’s the same word for “slow of learning” in chapter 5, verse 11 that we looked at last week. Don’t go there. Don’t stay. Don’t let your fingers stay in your ears.
But instead by like all those who have gone before. Like Abraham. Next week, he’ll be talking about Abraham. Abraham had faith and patiently waited for the promise to be fulfilled. He held on firmly to the promise.
Now, don’t miss the point. Right now, you might be feeling like your job is to somehow save yourself. “Look inside yourself and find the faith and courage to reach heaven.”
No. No. No. Don’t look inside yourself. Fix your eyes on Jesus. He’s the Son of God. He’s our great high priest. He has gone through the heavens.
Hold firmly to Him. Put your hope in Jesus.
***
Messages in this Series:
01. "The Son" - Hebrews 1:1-4
02. "Superior to the Angels" - Hebrews 1:5-14
03. "Such a Great Salvation" - Hebrews 2:1-4
04. "We See Jesus" - Hebrews 2:5-9
05. "Flesh and Blood" - Hebrews 2:10-18
06. "Fix Your Thoughts on Jesus" - Hebrews 3:1-6
07. “Today, If You Hear His Voice” - Hebrews 3:7-19
Bonus Historical Message: The Gift of My Rest - A Fictional Letter of Sabbath Theology
08. "A Sabbath-Rest for the People of God" - Hebrews 4:1-13
09. "Great High Priest" - Hebrews 4:14-16
10. "The Source of Eternal Salvation" - Hebrews 5:1-10
11. "On To Maturity" - Hebrews 5:11-6:3


































