Fixing Our Eyes on Jesus
The Letter to the Hebrews
Lanse Evangelical Free Church
March 8, 2026 :: Hebrews 3:1-6
“Fix Your Thoughts on Jesus.”
That’s the point of the message today, and it comes right out of verse 1.
“Therefore, holy brothers, who share in the heavenly calling, fix your thoughts on Jesus...”
So this message is going to be all about thinking. Studying. Focusing. Considering. Reflecting.
What did you focus on this week? What consumed your thoughts? We all had things we had to focus on this week.
Many of us have a job, and we had to focus on our work. Solving a problem. Making a product. Marketing a product. Ordering supplies. Teaching or training someone. Operating equipment. Programming the computer. Driving someone somewhere.
This week, Jenni English was teaching Keith Hurley all the things that he now has to do to keep the church office humming along.
We have to focus on our work.
Many of you are students, so you had to focus on your schoolwork. Focus on a lecture. Focus on a paper. Focus on a test. Studying your textbook.
Some of you are athletes so you had to focus on your sport. If you don’t keep your eye on the ball, you don’t connect it to your bat, and it might connect with your head!
Some of you are in theater, and you have to focus on your lines.
We all live in families of one kind or another, so we have had to focus on the family this week, I’m sure. Listening to each other. Living in community with each other requires focus and attention.
I’m sure that many of us focused on the news this last week. There is so much going on in the headlines. So much to process, to consider.
Some of us focused on entertainment, paying attention to the newest season of our favorite show or our favorite sports team or our favorite online influencer. Or going deep into a book or a game.
What did you focus on the last seven days?
There is so much to focus on. If you don’t focus, you don’t get anywhere. If you don’t focus on the road, you don’t reach your destination. If you don’t focus on your diet and exercise and medication, then your health deteriorates. If you don’t focus on the correct time, you are late for church when Daylight Savings hits!
And it’s so easy to lose focus.
The writer of this letter to the Hebrews knew that. He was worried that his readers who were scared of impending persecution were going to lose their focus on Christ and drop out of the race of faith and try to go back to just being Jews.
So he wrote them this pastoral letter to urge them to fix their eyes on Jesus. And keep them there. And here in verse 1, he urged them (and us) to keep their (and our) thoughts fixed on Jesus.
[VIDEO WILL BE EMBEDDED HERE.]
“Fix your thoughts on Jesus.”
Some of your versions may say in verse 1, “Consider Jesus.”
And that’s a good translation, too. Sometimes, we use that word to ask somebody to think about something that they haven’t thought about before.
Consider taking the Baptism Class.
Consider buying a new phone.
Consider using deodorant. (That’s something we might say to someone who hasn’t give it much thought before.)
And that’s true, too. Consider Jesus if you haven’t yet!
But that’s not the primary meaning here. This is more of an exhortation to continue to consider Jesus for those who already have been. It’s an invitation for them to think about Him more deeply, more reflectively, more intensely, more consistently.
Consider Jesus. Study Him and take note of Who He really is.
The Lord Jesus Himself used this same word when He pointed out illustrations to His teaching. Object lesson. He said, in Luke 12:24, “Consider the ravens: They do not sow or reap, they have no storeroom or barn; yet God feeds them. And how much more valuable you are than birds!”
And then He used it again in Luke 12:27, “Consider how the lilies grow. They do not labor or spin. Yet I tell you, not even Solomon in all his splendor was dressed like one of these.”
Consider. Just think about this. Turn it over in your mind. Focus on a bird. Focus on a flower. And think about what they each teach you about trusting God.
And the writer to the Hebrews says, “Yeah, do that. Do that focusing but on Jesus Himself.” “Fix your thoughts on Jesus...”
Did you do that this week? Did you find time to focus your attention on Him? Did you set aside time to fix your thoughts on Jesus?
That’s one of the benefits of having a daily devotional time that is the same day after day. Not because it earns you brownie points with God. It doesn’t. But because it builds into your day a time when you know you are going to consider Jesus. Because it doesn’t often happen on its own.
That’s also one of the benefits of Sunday mornings at church. We come together to fix our thoughts on Jesus. We sing songs about Him and to Him.
“Join all the glorious names of wisdom, love, and power
That every mortals know that angels ever bore
All are too poor to speak His worth
Too poor to set my Savior forth!”
[Isaac Watts]
How many names for Jesus does that one hymn have? “Savior, Prophet, High Priest, Shepherd, Lord, Conqueror, King” You can spend all day just reflecting on all of those names.
Consider Jesus. That’s not just for non-Christians. It’s for Christians. In fact, that’s what it says in verse 1. Notice what the writer calls us. Verse 1.
“Therefore, holy brothers, who share in the heavenly calling, fix your thoughts on Jesus...”
This is actually the first time in the letter when the author names the people to whom he’s writing. He has been addressing them all along, but here he gives them a name.
“Holy brothers (and that includes you sisters, too), who share in the heavenly calling.”
This is who we are! And it flows out of what he has just been teaching to them in chapter 2. Remember last week, “Flesh and Blood?”
Jesus took on flesh and blood, and He is our flesh and blood. He became a human like you and me and is not ashamed to call us His siblings.
He is not ashamed of you, brothers.
He is not ashamed of you, sisters.
He doesn’t mind being associated with you. He loves it!
Because He’s one of us, and He’s making us holy. Remember 2:11, “Both the one who makes [us] holy and those who are made holy are of the same [stuff]. So Jesus is not ashamed to call [us] brothers [and sisters].”
We call each other brothers and sisters, and so does He! Jesus calls us, “holy brothers and sisters!” and we are because of what Jesus did for us on the Cross.
And that means that we “share in the heavenly calling.” What’s that? It means that heaven has called, and we’re called to heaven! Jesus is bringing many sons and daughters to glory. And you and I have a piece of that. How does that make you feel?! Does it give you wings?
It’s so easy to forget who we are and even more easy to forget Who Jesus is.
So, holy family who are headed to heaven, “fix your thoughts on Jesus.”
I’ve got three simple points this morning to focus exactly what this letter is telling us to fix our thoughts about Jesus on, and here’s the first one.
Fix your thoughts:
#1. ON WHO HE IS.
Verse 1 calls Him, “the apostle and high priest whom we confess.”
Pop quiz. Was Jesus an apostle? Feels like a trick question. Doesn’t it? Of course He was. And of course He is. That’s what verse 1 says. But it is the only time that the Bible calls Jesus an apostle. All of the rest of the time, it was apostles of Jesus that were being talked about.
An apostle is an authorized representative who is sent on a mission to speak on someone else’s behalf. The twelve were the apostles of Jesus. Who is Jesus an apostle of?
He’s the apostle of God the Father, isn’t He? How many times when we were reading the Gospel of John did Jesus say that He was sent?
Jesus was a man on mission. And He was sent by His Father to be His final word. “...in these last days he has spoken to us by his Son” (Hebrew 1:2).
So He comes from God and represents God to us. And what’s this other name for Him in verse 1?
“High priest.” Guess what a high priest does? He represents us back to God! A high priest intercedes before God on behalf of the people.
And Jesus is both! He is both the apostle and the high priest. He comes down and speaks for God, and He comes up and speaks for us! Just think about that! Consider Jesus.
The writer says that this is “whom we confess.” This is Who we say we believe in. Jesus, the apostle and high priest.
The author just brought up this idea of Jesus being a high priest in the last chapter, and he’s going to come back to it again and again in the middle of this book. It’s a major theme of Hebrews.
He said in verse 17 that Jesus “had to be made like [us] in every way, in order that he might become a merciful and faithful high priest in service to God, and that he might make atonement for the sins of the people.”
And you and I can’t think about that enough.
In the next few verses, the writer drills down on that word “faithful.” Jesus is merciful and faithful. That’s who He is. Look at verse 2.
“He [Jesus] was faithful to the one who appointed him, just as Moses was faithful in all God's house.”
Okay. Now he brings up Moses. He might have even said, “Consider Moses. Let’s think about Moses for a second and compare and contrast him to Jesus.”
Question. Was Moses important to the Hebrews? You bet he was! There might not be a more significant figure in Jewish life. Abraham or David are the only ones that come anywhere close.
Moses was the Leader who brought the Israelites out of Egypt. The Rescuer!
Moses was the Lawgiver through whom came the ten commandments and the rest of the Old Covenant Law.
Moses was the main Author of the first five books of the Bible!
Moses was a Prophet who predicted the future.
Moses was the Builder in charge of the construction of the tabernacle and the establishing of the sacrificial system, and his brother Aaron was the first high priest.
We cannot overemphasize how important Moses was to the Hebrews.
But was he faithful?
Yes, he was. He wasn’t perfect. He was very flawed. But he was faithful. You know how I know? God said so!
In the book of Numbers, Moses’s siblings got mad at him for his choice of a wife. He had married a Cushite, and in a probable mix of racism and envy, Miriam and Aaron were unhappy with his choice.
And they complained about it loudly, and God heard them.
And God spoke to them from a pillar of cloud in front of the Tent of Meeting. And He said, “Listen to my words: ‘When a prophet of the LORD is among you, I reveal myself to him in visions, I speak to him in dreams. But this is not true of my servant Moses; he is faithful in all my house. [Sound familiar?] With him I speak face to face, clearly and not in riddles; he sees the form of the LORD. Why then were you not afraid to speak against my servant Moses?'” (see Numbers 12:6-8). And there were some drastic consequences.
Now, we know that was figurative language that Moses didn’t actually see God’s unmediated face because He said that also (Exodus 33:2), but that’s how close Moses was to God!
Moses went up into the cloud on the top of the mountain and heard directly from God, and then remember what happened to his face when he came down from the cloud? It beamed! It radiated light because Moses had looked upon the Lord in some mysterious way. Perhaps a theophany. An appearance of God in some form. Nobody in the Old Testament got so close!
And God said, “[M]y servant Moses[?]; he is faithful in all my house.”
What a commendation! I would love it if He said the same some day about me. “Matt Mitchell? He was faithful in my house. He did what I asked.”
The word “house” there is a metaphor for the people of God. I don’t think he’s talking about the tabernacle right there. I think He means more what we might call “household,” the people of a house. The household was the essential building block of society in that day. It included all of the family and all of the servants attached to the family. And God was saying that He had a household, and that Moses was a faithful servant in it.
The Jews revered Moses. And rightfully so because God said that Moses was faithful. And this writer agrees. He’s not dissing on Moses. But he is comparing Moses to Jesus. Look at verse 2 again.
Jesus “...was faithful to the one who appointed him, just as Moses was faithful in all God's house.”
Jesus is like Moses in being faithful.
But He’s so much more. Number two. Fix your thoughts:
#2. ON HOW GREAT HE IS.
Or how greatER He is. And listen to verse 3.
“Jesus has been found worthy of greater honor than Moses, just as the builder of a house has greater honor than the house itself. For every house is built by someone, but God is the builder of everything” (vv.3-4).
Now, that was saying something to these Jewish Christians!
They should know it, but did they feel it in their bones? Jesus has been found worthy of greater honor than Moses. Should Moses be honored? Sure! God honored him and called him faithful. But is Jesus greater than Moses? It’s not even a contest!
You and I probably don’t feel this so much because we don’t have that deep connection to Moses. But think about somebody you do have a deep connection to. Maybe it’s a parent or grandparent? Maybe it’s a teacher from your past. Maybe it’s a great leader that you have always learned from and looked up to. Maybe it was your pastor when you were growing up.
We all have heroes. And while we shouldn’t put our hope in them (because they will all fail us in some way and some in terrible ways), it’s not wrong to look up to them as examples when they are faithful. Who is it for you?
My Dad turns 80 years old tomorrow. He’s one of my biggest heroes. He’s completely trustworthy. He has been faithful in God’s house, and I’m grateful.
But Jesus has been found worthy of greater honor than Chuck Mitchell. And Chuck Mitchell would agree.
And Moses would agree! That Jesus has been found worthy of greater honor than him.
Remember when Jesus took Peter, James, and John up on that high mountain and who showed up out of the blue? Elijah and...Moses!
And they met with Jesus. And then a cloud enveloped them and they disappeared and then all Peter, James, and John saw was Jesus. And God spoke to them. And what did He say? “Hey was that Moses! He’s really something!” No, He said, “This is my Son, whom I love; with him I am well pleased. Listen to him!” (Matthew 17:5).
Fix your thoughts on Him. And how great He is! And did Jesus’ face radiate? It did. But it wasn’t just a reflection because He’d come to close to God. It came from within Him because He is God!
His face shone like the sun! Because He is the Son. He “is the radiance of God's glory and the exact representation of his being” (Hebrews 1:3)! He’s so much greater than Moses.
And these folks were considering backing away from Jesus and going back to just following Moses. This pastor is saying that’s spiritual suicide.
We’ve seen already that this whole letter makes a sustained argument that Jesus is greater, better, superior to everything else including everything that is truly great in the Old Testament.
Here in chapter 3 it is Moses.
“Jesus has been found worthy of greater honor than Moses.” And that’s saying something.
How much greater? Verse 3 says “just as the builder of a house has greater honor than the house itself.”
Have you ever been to a great house? One with an amazing design? Heather and I love to tour beautiful buildings. We’ve been to a few designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, for example. “Falling Water” right here in Pennsylvania. Which is greater? “Falling Water” or the guy who came up with Falling Water and all of those 531 other buildings that were built that he designed? Which is greater? Faithful Moses or the God Who made Moses? It’s not really a contest, is it? Verse 4.
“For every house is built by someone, but God is the builder of everything.”
And guess Who Jesus is? He’s God the Son. He made the house. He designed the house. That’s why we should fix our thoughts on Him. He’s so so so great!
Again, not saying anything bad here about Moses. Look at verse 5.
“Moses was faithful as a servant in all God's house, testifying to what would be said in the future [He was a prophet. He faithfully predicted Jesus coming! Verse 6.] But Christ is faithful as a son over God's house.”
Do you hear the differences?
Which one was faithful? Both of them.
But Moses is faithful as a SERVANT IN all God’s house.
Jesus is faithful as a SON OVER God’s house.
That’s a huge difference.
The servant doesn’t own the house.
The servant doesn’t inherit the house.
The servant is a vital part of the house and can be faithful in it.
But the Son?! The house is His and will be His because of His Father.
And what about this Son? Was He faithful? Oh, yes, He was. And oh, yes, He is! That’s the whole point. “Christ is faithful....” (v.6)! Fix your thoughts on this. Fix your thoughts:
#3. ON HOW FAITHFUL HE IS.
How trustworthy, how dependable, how reliable Jesus is. He can be trusted. Amen?
Who is Jesus faithful to in this part of the letter? We immediately run to His faithfulness to us. And that’s true. He always keeps His promises to us. And we’re going to sing about that in just a second.
“Great is Thy faithfulness, Lord, unto me.” (Thomas Chisholm)
But that’s not where this writer focuses in these verses. No, he focuses on Jesus’ faithfulness to God!
Look up at verse 2 again, “He was faithful to the one who appointed him...” Verse 6 again, “Christ is faithful as a son over God’s house.” Everything the Father asked the Son to do, He did. Perfectly. Everything the Father is asking the Son to do, He does. Jesus is faithful.
“Great is Jesus’ faithfulness, O Lord to Thee!”
Just think, for second, what would have happened if He wasn’t. Imagine if Jesus had been unfaithful to His Father. Imagine if Jesus had given in to the temptation in the garden to push that cup away from Him. Imagine if Jesus had said, “I am no longer willing to go to the Cross. You can’t have my flesh and blood.” “I am not your apostle any more, Father, and I am not their high priest.” It’s unthinkable. All would be lost.
But Jesus was faithful. He is the “the author and perfecter of our faith.” For the joy set before Him, He “endured the cross, scorning its shame...” He was faithful unto death.
And where is He now, church? He “sat down at the right hand of the throne of God!” (See Hebrews 12:2).
The Father said, “Well done, My Son. Come on up here. You’re a great high priest. You are merciful and faithful. You have saved your people from their sins. You’ve satisfied my wrath. You have made atonement. Come on up here and be honored! Over the whole house.”
That’s why these precious people should fix their thoughts on Jesus! Because, as great as Moses was, he was just servant, but the Lord Jesus who took on the form of a servant was and is the Son, the Apostle and High Priest whom we confess.
What’s the application of that? Hold on to Jesus. Put your trust in Him and focus on Him every single day. Because this is all true for those all who belong to Him. That’s the point of the last sentence in verse 6.
“And we are his house, if we hold on to our courage and the hope of which we boast.”
We are His house! We are a holy family who share in the heavenly calling. And we are His house. If we hold on to our courage (or better our "bold confidence") and the hope of which we boast. The hope in which we glory.
There is an implied warning embedded in those words. If we do not hold on to our faith in Jesus and our hope in Jesus, then we show ourselves to NOT be His house. If we let go of Jesus and turn our back on Jesus and walk away from Jesus and never return to Jesus, then we will not end up sharing in the heavenly calling.
Our assurance of salvation comes, in part, by our perseverance in faith. And our perseverance in faith comes, in part, because we are assured of such a great salvation.
The point of verse 6 is that the Word of God is calling us to hold on to the Son of God. Don’t let go.
Or else! He’s going to say a lot more about that “or else” in the next section of chapter 3. It’s scary what will happen if we totally let go.
So don’t let go! Hold fast. Hold firmly. Keep your eyes fixed on Jesus. Keep your thoughts fixed on Him. Consider Jesus. Now and always.
And this week. Are you going to do that? Let me encourage you to make a plan. You have a lot of things to focus on this week.
When are you going to fix your thoughts on Jesus?
How are you going to fix your thoughts on Jesus?
When are you going to open your Bible?
When are you going to pray?
When are you going to meet with other Christians?
This week.
This last week, I was meeting with a younger Christian, and we talked about how Sunday morning church is a Saturday night choice. You’ve got to set an alarm. You’ve got make a plan. You’ve got to go to bed.
Same thing with Bible. Same thing with prayer. When are you going to do do it? How are you going to do it. You know you need it. You know He’s worthy of it!
Fix your thoughts on Who He is–the apostle and high priest whom we confess.
Fix your thoughts on how great He is–greater than Moses, greater than all of your heroes combined. He made all of your heroes!
Fix your thoughts on how faithful He is–to God and because He was faithful to God, we can be saved forever.
And He’ll be faithful to us, as well.
Hold onto Jesus and fix your thoughts on Him.


































