Sunday, July 19, 2026

*Even Here [Matt's Messages]

*Even Here - Challenge 2026
Lanse Evangelical Free Church
July 19, 2026 :: Psalm 139

Thank you, Challenge Team, for sharing about your week in Kansas City. It sounds like it was an incredible time of learning and fun and spiritual growth. I’m so glad we all could have a part in sending you with our gifts and especially with our prayers.

All week long, I used the prayer guide that Challenge sent us of what to pray for you every day which included what Psalms you were learning about each day.

The theme this year was *Even Here: Experiencing God in the Psalms. And every day you studied at least one Psalm together with 4,000 of your closest EFCA friends. I saw Psalm 19, 73, 51, 13, 100, Psalm 10, and Psalm 145. What wonderful songs to take into your heart!

Today, for the sermon, I thought we might take a short break from Hebrews and look at a Psalm together, specifically Psalm 139 which I think inspired the theme for Challenge this year. 

Psalm 139 ends with this prayer request. “Search me.”

“Search me, O God, and know my heart; test me and know my anxious thoughts. See if there is any offensive way in me, and lead me in the way everlasting.”

Isn’t that a great prayer? “Search me.” Have you said that to God this week? I’ll bet the Challenge Group has. “Search me.”

That’s not a snide remark like, “What are you bringing to the picnic on the 2nd?” “I don’t know! Search me!”

No, it’s a prayer for God to look into our hearts and to see what is truly there. It’s an invitation for God to know us as we really are and to move us to become who He wants us to be. “Search Me.”

How did King David get to the point where he could and would ask God to search him in that way? I think King David got to that point by knowing what kind of God He truly is. And Psalm 139 sings it to us. Let’s look at together. Verse 1.

“For the director of music. Of David. A psalm.”

We don’t know much more about the context of this prayer–many scholars believe that David has been accused by someone else of being unfaithful to the Lord, and he is seeking vindication here. I’m not sure if that’s true. I’m not sure at all what the historical setting was for this Psalm. I’ll bet they said at Challenge that sometimes it’s better not to know those details because the application feels even more immediate to our lives now.

Regardless of the setting, it’s a psalm of King David meant to be sung by others like you and me and applied to our lives today. 

David ends the Psalm by asking God to search him, but he begins the psalm by stating that he knows the LORD already has searched him. V.1

“O LORD, you have searched me and you know me.”

I’ve got four points this morning that are actually four prayers that we can pray back to the Lord ourselves. 

#1. YOU KNOW ME.

David can end up asking God to search him, because he already knows that the LORD has already done so. You know me.

“O LORD, you have searched me and you know me.”

That word for “search” means “to examine.” In our computerized world, we use the word “search” all the time these days. Often, we set a computer going to find some piece of information that we lack. We “google” things nowadays. Right? The ubiquitous “search bar.”

But this is not an impersonal search for a trivial piece of information. This is being known. This is being examined. This is a Person taking a close look at another person. It’s more like a trip to the doctor than putting a query into ChatGPT.

“God, You have checked me out. You know me.” 

David is amazed at how well God knows him. V.2

“You know when I sit and when I rise;”

Up or down. You know it. And not just what position I’m in. What I’m thinking! “...you perceive my thoughts from afar.” God is a mind-reader. V.3

“You discern my going out and my lying down; you are familiar with all my ways.”

We just sang those words together. “All my ways are known to you.” Whether I get up and head out on a walk in the morning or come home and go to bed, you know all of my doings. My patterns. My ways.

And this is not just impersonal information. It’s not just that God has a database of factoids about me. I’m not just in His spreadsheet. He knows me. He is familiar with my ways.

Many of you have pets. Do you know “the ways” of your pet? If you come home and your pet is nowhere to be seen, do you have a good idea where they could be found? You know the ways of your pet. Their comings and goings and habits. It’s not just that you could look it up in an Encyclopedia. “This is what cats generally do.” You know this pet and how he or she acts. You are familiar with their ways.

How much more is God familiar with our ways? He knows us much better than we know ourselves. V.4

“Before a word is on my tongue you know it completely, O LORD.”

Sometimes my wife knows what I’m going to say before I do. I thought I just came up with that sentence, but Heather was way ahead of me. Not necessarily because we think alike, but because she knows me. How much more does God know us! 

Do you see how personal this Psalm is? David is saying, “You know me.” Completely. And not just as a bunch of facts but personally, intimately, deeply, truly, relationally. You know me. V.5

“You hem me in–behind and before; you have laid your hand upon me. Such knowledge is too wonderful for me, too lofty for me to attain.”

“I just can’t grasp how much you know me, God!”

David is filled with wonder that he is known in this way. Does that same truth fill us with wonder today? 

Most people desperately want to be known. I think that’s one of the major reasons for much of what we see, for example, on social media. People are saying, “Know me! I’m putting myself out here. Know me!”

Church, you are known! By the One that matters the most. V.6

“Such knowledge is too wonderful for me, too lofty for me to attain.”

#2. YOU’VE GOT ME.

That’s what David was saying in v.5 with “You hem me in–behind and before; you have laid your hand upon me.”

You’ve got me. I’m trapped! There is no escape from behind–no back door. And there is no escape from before–you’ve arrested me. You’ve laid your hand on me.

It’s not clear whether or not David wants to escape from God. Perhaps, that feeling of being known also gives him a touch of the willies and fosters an urge to escape. Or maybe he’s just saying that even if he wanted to get away, he knows that he can’t. Either way, there is no. hiding. from the Lord. V.7

“Where can I go from your Spirit? Where can I flee from your presence? If I go up to the heavens, you are there; if I make my bed in the depths, you are there. If I rise on the wings of the dawn, if I settle on the far side of the sea, even there your hand will guide me, your right hand will hold me fast.”

We sang those words this morning, too. “You will hold me fast.” There is no getting away from God. He is everywhere. 

If verses 1-6 were about God’s omniscience, verses 7-12 are about God’s omnipresence.

But it’s not just that God is there and standing around like some absent-minded professor. “Oh yes, he’s here, but he’s not all here.”

No, this is saying that God is present. He is relationally with David wherever David would run to.

The sky? Check.
The ocean floor? Check.
Flying at the speed of light? He’s there.
On the other side of the world? He’s there, too.

You can’t get away from God. You can run, but you can’t hide. Not even in the darkest place. V.11

“If I say, ‘Surely the darkness will hide me and the light become night around me,’ even the darkness will not be dark to you; the night will shine like the day, for darkness is as light to you.”

For the God who is light, there is no place that is dark.

What’s the upshot of that? 

Well, at first, it might not seem like good news. Who wants inescapable supervision? Somebody watching you all of the time? Kind of sounds like prison?

But David knows that it is good news. V.10 again.

Wherever I am, “...even there your hand will guide me, your right hand will hold me fast.”

“Even there.” 

“Even here.” I’ll tell you who wants inescapable supervision...sheep do. Or at least if they don’t want it, they need it. Sheep need a shepherd. You and I are needy people, and we need a good shepherd to keep a guiding hand on us all of the time. It’s so good to be able to say, “You’ve got me.”

Have you prayed that this week? Perhaps you’re going through something right now that is really painful. Have you thanked the Lord that you are not alone in that pain? Have you given yourself and your situation over to Him?

I talked to someone this week who just wasn’t willing to say that to the Lord this week. “You’ve got me.”

“Lord, you’ve got me. I know that I can’t get away from you, and that’s  such a good thing! I’m yours.” Because...

#3. YOU MADE ME. 

Verse 13. 

“For you created my inmost being; you knit me together in my mother's womb. I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made; your works are wonderful, I know that full well.”

This is how deep this relationship goes: David knows that he is the Lord’s own creation. God is not just omniscient and omnipresent. He is the Creator. The Maker. God didn’t just come to know David over time. He has known David all along, from the beginning. Because He made him!

This is the verse that we quote every January around Sanctity of Human Life Sunday. And that’s right. It’s all about that. It’s all about how God is intimately involved in making us. He designed us. He designed each of us personally, and that bestows a heaping measure of dignity to every human life.

But David is saying something even more profound. He’s saying that in making us, God knows us and has every right over us. V.15

“My frame was not hidden from you when I was made in the secret place [the womb]. When I was woven together in the depths of the earth, your eyes saw my unformed body. All the days ordained for me were written in your book before one of them came to be.”

I think that David uses the image of “the depths of the earth” to describe the most hidden place that he can think of. They didn’t have any ultrasounds back then. The womb was, for David, the most hidden place a person could be alive on earth. But God saw into the womb. God was there, and God was directing that new life.

“All the days ordained for me were written in your book before one of them came to be. How precious to me are your thoughts, O God! How vast is the sum of them! Were I to count them, they would outnumber the grains of sand. When I awake, I am still with you.”

David just lives in amazement. He can’t hardly believe how fearfully and wonderfully he is made, and he can’t hardly believe how sovereign God is over his life, and he can’t hardly believe how deep and long and wide are the thoughts of God. Thoughts that make and create. Thoughts that are so awesome they cannot be numbered!

Now, scholars are divided over what that last sentence in verse 18 means.

“When I awake, I am still with you.”

Does that mean that David has been exhausted by these innumerable thoughts and then wakes up at that point? Or does it go back to the first section and mean that even in the mornings when David gets up, there is God? “Even there.” Some scholars even think it means awakening from resurrection. Even when we come back from the sleep of death. 

Any way about it, the point is “I am still with you.”  There He is! There God is. God is not absent. God is present. And I am with Him. *Even here.

Now, how “with Him” am I? How with God am I? He’s all here, but...am I all His? I think that’s the point of the next four verses.

For many of us, these four verses feel like an intrusion. Like they don’t fit. But they flowed very naturally for King David. Look at verse 19.

“If only you would slay the wicked, O God! Away from me, you bloodthirsty men! They speak of you with evil intent; your adversaries misuse your name. Do I not hate those who hate you, O LORD, and abhor those who rise up against you? I have nothing but hatred for them; I count them my enemies.”

That’s what we call an “imprecatory” prayer. The Challenge Group learned about that on Thursday when Pastor Stephen Love preached on Psalm 10.  It’s an imprecatory prayer is a prayer for justice to be done by the Lord. *Even here.

Now, we tend to stumble over these verses because they can seem so far from our Lord Jesus’ command to love our enemies. And there is something new about our Lord’s command that at least modifies what is going on here in these verses. 

But the emphasis here is not on personal hatred of those who are our enemies. The emphasis is on loyalty to God over against those who are His enemies. David is saying that he does not side with those who side against God.

“Do I not hate those who hate you, O LORD, and abhor those who rise up against you?”  

Another way of saying it would be to say, “I am not on Satan’s side. Not one bit.”

I’m on the LORD’s side!
I’m on Yahweh’s side.
I do not identify with the enemies of God. I hate them.

Do you see how that works? It’s not saying that we shouldn’t love our enemies. God loves His own enemies! But there is a right way to love our enemies and even a right way to hate them. If the choice is between loving them and their ways or loving God and His, then we side with God every time.

In other words, David is saying:

#4. YOU CAN COUNT ON ME.

How’s that for a prayer? Can you pray that today?

“You can count on me, Lord. You know which side of the battle You will find me on.”

I know that you know me.
I know that you’ve got me.
I know that you made me.

And so I’m yours. I’m completely yours. So, yes, go ahead–search me. V.23

“Search me, O God, and know my heart; test me and know my anxious thoughts. See if there is any offensive way in me, and lead me in the way everlasting.”

Go ahead, Lord. 

I know that You already know what You’ll find.

Search me. Know my heart.
Test me. Examine me.
Listen to my thoughts.

Some of them, I admit, are very anxious. This generation of young people is marked by anxiety.  And so am I.

And if I’m really honest? Yes, I’m anxious about You, too, God. 

"Lord, sometimes You worry me. Sometimes, I feel like I want to escape, to hide, to get out of Your gaze. But I know there is nowhere to go. And when I think about it the right way, I know that there is no place I’d rather be than. with. You. And to the degree that this is not true for me today, please forgive me. See all of the offensive ways in me, and cleanse me by the precious blood of Jesus Christ."

King David knew that God knew his sin. It was ever before him. And David knew (we know from Psalm 51, which Pastor Eric Rivera taught at Challenge on Tuesday) that David knew what it means to be forgiven.

And we know that forgiveness comes from the work of our Great High Priest the Lord Jesus Christ.


Search me, O God, and cleanse me God, I pray.

*Even here.


***

People with sharp memories may remember earlier forms of this message preached in 2013 and 2020. What a joy that Psalm 139 is all true all the time!

Wednesday, July 15, 2026

"Beware of both undevotional theology and untheological devotion."

 

Sunday, July 12, 2026

“By His Own Blood” [Matt's Messages]

“By His Own Blood”
Fixing Our Eyes on Jesus 
The Letter to the Hebrews
Lanse Evangelical Free Church
July 12, 2026 :: Hebrews 9:1-14  

What is the worst thing that you have ever done?

(Don’t yell it out!)

But what is the worst thing that you have ever done as a human being? What is the worst thing you have ever wanted to do? Thought about doing? Dreamed about doing? Sin is thinking, wanting, or doing what displeases God. What is the worst sin that you have committed?

I don’t really want to know. I know my own sin, and I think that if all of the history of sin in this one room was revealed, it would be unbearable to think about. Not that we all have been as sinful as we possibly we could. I’m sure that we could have been much worse. God’s restraining grace is a wonderful thing! But I know my own history with sin, and I know some of your sins because you’ve talked to me about them. And I know what the Bible says about how each one of us has sinned and fallen so far short of the glory of God.

What is the worst sin that you have committed? How do you feel about it today?

I hope that you are not feeling proud of it. 
I assume you probably feel regret over it. 
I wonder if you feel forgiven of it?

I’d guess that some of us here feel ashamed of it. We feel dirty. We feel impure, unholy, maybe unworthy of coming near to God.

“Dirty, dirty, dirty.”

“Who do I think I am to come near to God? God is holy, holy, holy! Who do I think I am to approach Him? Much less serve Him.”

Do you sometimes feel unworthy to serve God because of your sin? 

“I can’t go out and talk about God. I know what I’ve done. I can’t teach kids the Bible. I’m too dirty on the inside. A holy God can’t use me.”

If those thoughts run through your mind, this passage of holy Scripture has something good to say to you today. I know it does for me.


We’ve reached the heart of the Letter to the Hebrews, and I’ve said you can summarize with it three short words. What are they?

Great. High. Priest.

Jesus is our great high priest. He’s our greater high priest. The writer is trying convince these Jewish Christians that Jesus is greater than everything they know and love from their Old Testament–including the Levitical Aaronic priesthood. Ever since chapter 4, he’s been trying to show them how Jesus is our greater high priest. And the list is long. We’ve been making charts!

Team Melchizedek for the win! Team Jesus for the win!

Jesus is a much better priest. And He is the mediator of a much better covenant. Last week, we saw in chapter 8 how much better are the promises of the new covenant promised in Jeremiah 31 than the promises of the older covenant given through Moses.

And those promises are so good that they can get us out of bed even when we don’t feel like it. Did those better promises help you get out of bed this week? Help you keep going? Keep going! Fix your eyes on Jesus.

Well, this pastor has much more to say about why Jesus is a greater high priest with a superior ministry. Two more chapters worth! And we need to understand these things to know our better high priest better and the salvation that He brings.

And in this next section, he’s going to turn his focus on how our great high priest serves in a greater sanctuary with a greater sacrifice. A better sanctuary and a better sacrifice. He’s talked about it already, but he’s going to go deeper.

Hebrews says that our great high priest serves in a greater sanctuary with a greater sacrifice.

And to show that, he’s going to have to talk a lot about...blood.

We’ve reached the part of this letter where the writer is going to talk a lot about blood.

You might surprised to learn the word “blood” has only appeared once in this letter when the author pointed out that Jesus had flesh and blood. But starting in verse 7, he’s going to use the word “blood” at least 22 more times!

Blood, blood, blood, blood everywhere.

This book takes a turn for the violent. And, I’m sorry if you are squeamish about blood. I can be, too. I have the handwriting to be a doctor, but I could never become one because I don’t like the sight of blood.

In this context, “blood” stands for the sacrificial death of something or someone that had been alive. It’s not so much the red stuff itself but how that red stuff was shed. A sacrificial death. A violent death, not a peaceful one where the one who died just fell asleep and their body shut down. But a death where blood was spilled. Where the one who died was killed. And the one dying was sacrificed for another. That’s what “blood” means in Hebrews.

It’s not pretty, but it is precious.

Especially the blood that our great high priest offered as His greater sacrifice in the greater sanctuary. And we all know what that is. It’s His own blood. We’ve been singing about it all morning!

But I’m getting ahead of the story. First, he’s going to set it up by teaching about the first sanctuary and the blood sacrifices that went with it.

Let’s start in verse 1 of chapter 9.

Now, remember, this is all very foreign to us, but it was very familiar to them. This is what they were tempted to fall back on. But he just told them in the last verse of chapter 8 that it was all going away. Chapter 9, verse 1.

“Now the first covenant had regulations for worship and also an earthly sanctuary. A tabernacle was set up. In its first room were the lampstand, the table and the consecrated bread; this was called the Holy Place. Behind the second curtain was a room called the Most Holy Place, which had the golden altar of incense and the gold-covered ark of the covenant. This ark contained the gold jar of manna, Aaron's staff that had budded, and the stone tablets of the covenant. Above the ark were the cherubim of the Glory, overshadowing the atonement cover. But we cannot discuss these things in detail now” (vv.1-5).

He says that he can’t go into detail, but there is still a lot of detail there!

Again, these things were familiar to them as much as they foreign to us. They all knew the Book of Exodus and the Book of Leviticus so they were familiar with the tabernacle in the wilderness.

It was a tent. God told Moses to build this worship tent and plop it in the middle of the camp of the Israelites. He gave Moses a blueprint with instructions for all of the details. 

Go back and read Exodus 25 to see some of those details. It’s really fascinating. Hebrews doesn’t focus on the court outside of the tabernacle. There was a big fence around it (150' by 75'). Hebrews focuses on the two room tent inside of the fence which was 45' by 15'.

Hebrews gives us like the floor-plan if you were trying to search the tabernacle on Zillow or Redfin or Realty.com. 

I can tell you right now that you couldn’t afford it. It was only a tent and only 2 rooms, but both rooms were filled with gold. Gleaming gold.

The first room (according to verse 2) had a golden lampstand in it. Like a menorah. It had 7 wicks always lit at night to show that Somebody was home. And it also had the golden table of the consecrated bread. Twelve loves there all of the time. That room was 30' by 15'. They called that room “The Holy Place.”

And then there was a heavy curtain between that first room in the tent and the second room (which was 15' by 15').

And that second room they called “The Most Holy Place.” Literally, “The Holy of Holies.”

All of this is about holiness. Being set apart. God is holy, holy, holy. And this one is His room.

And it’s full of gold. The first thing verse 4 mentions was probably actually in the Holy Place, but it was for the Most Holy Place.

It was the golden altar of incense. Incense is this organic stuff that if if you burn it, it releases a fragrant smoke. And when the High Priest went into the Most Holy Place on the Day of Atonement, he scooped up two handfuls of incense from this table and took it in with him to the “gold-covered ark of the covenant” (Leviticus 16:12).

That’s the box, the chest covered in gold inside and outside that contained at times the jar of manna that never decomposed and Aaron’s staff that miraculously budded, and the second set of stone plates that had the 10 commandments inscribed as it were by the very finger of God!

These things reminded the Israelites of God’s gracious provision for them  all of those years.

And the ark itself was like God’s throne. Like you could imagine Him sitting there. Verse 5 says that above it were these golden statutes of the cherubim–these awesome angelic creatures with huge wings–  overshadowing the “atonement cover.”  Traditionally rendered, “The Mercy Seat.” Which was a slab of pure gold where the blood was sprinkled.

Every year on the Day of Atonement (Yom Kippur), the high priest (a son of Levi, a son of Aaron) would take blood into that room and sprinkle it on the Atonement Cover. You can read about it in Leviticus chapter 16. I recommend that everybody read Leviticus 16 this afternoon. I almost decided to read it as part of this message, but it seemed a little too long for today.

Here’s where the blood goes. On top of this ark.

Now, verse 5 says that we cannot discuss these things in detail now. They didn’t have to. They knew all about them.

They knew what a good gift all of this was. Because of these two rooms, God could dwell safely among them at the center of their community. Because of this tabernacle, the priests could safely represent these sinful people to a holy, holy, holy God.

And these two rooms were also teaching them about the holiness of God. Everything in them was deeply symbolic. We could spend a lot of time on how Jesus is the light of the world (like the lamp stand) and the bread of life (like the bread on the table) or how our prayers are like incense.

But what Hebrews emphasizes is the holiness. It’s all about access. Do you see that? Look at verse 6.

“When everything had been arranged like this, the priests entered regularly into the outer room to carry on their ministry.” Stop there for a second.

Question: Who could go into the outer room? The Holy Place. Could you and I go into that room? Sinners that we are? No. We couldn’t go into outer court! Because I think we are all Gentiles here.

But could someone from the Tribe of Judah go into the Holy Place? No. King David would not have been welcome in the Holy Place. 

Only the priests. They went in regularly. They had to fill the oil in the lampstand. They had to swap out the old bread and put in the new. They actually got to eat the old bread every week! And they had to fill the incense altar with incense.

But what about the next room over?  Could all the priests go in there? No. Only one of them could! Look at verse 7.

“But only the high priest entered the inner room, and that only once a year, and never without blood, which he offered for himself and for the sins the people had committed in ignorance.”

Notice the stipulations:

Only the high priest.
Only once a year.
And only with blood.

Why?

Because God is holy, holy, holy.

It’s all about access.

Everybody in our Challenge Group is going to get one of these name tags  in Kansas City. These are mine from the 3 years I got to go. 2014, 2016, and 2018 back when my kids were in high school.

And you aren’t allowed into the building for worship at Challenge without your name tag. Without your  access card. If you don’t have it, you have to stand outside. You are separated from all the goodness inside. You need your access card to enter in.

Blood was the access card for the high priest.

“Never without blood.” You see that?  

“Never without blood.” That’s important. That’s not a small thing. That’s a rule of the universe, you and I cannot approach the holy, holy, holy God without blood. Read Leviticus 16.

And Aaron and his sons offered the blood for themselves and for the sins the people had committed ignorance. That doesn’t mean they didn’t know they were sinning. It means all of the sins that weren’t the defiant sins of total apostasy. “Sins of the high hand.”

With those two handfuls incense, the high priest also took in blood behind the curtain and sprinkled it on the atonement cover and then left. And Israel was covered for another year.

Is that good or bad? It was so good! What a gift of grace that God provided them this sacrificial system to show how holy He is, how terrible sin is, and how His holiness can be satisfied by a sacrifice of blood.

It was so good. But it was not good enough. It was insufficient. It was ineffective. It was weak. It wasn’t enough to get you and me all the way in to God. Look at verse 8.

“The Holy Spirit was showing by this that the way into the Most Holy Place had not yet been disclosed as long as the first tabernacle was still standing.”

God the Spirit was showing through the tabernacle’s inspired floor-plan that you and I still had no way to go all the way to God. While the old covenant was in effect.

He’s trying to get them to see how the old covenant was not enough. We need the new! We need a new way in. And not only that, but these sacrifices, as good as they were, could only clean the outside of the people. Look at verse 9.

“This is an illustration for the present time, indicating that the gifts and sacrifices being offered were not able to clear the conscience of the worshiper. They are only a matter of food and drink and various ceremonial washings–external regulations applying until the time of the new order” (vv.9-10).

Do you see what he’s saying? The blood that gave them access was only effective “skin deep.” It didn’t get all the way down to their guilt. It covered them. Symbolically. And effectively for the time being. And as a symbol of the sacrifice to come. But that blood did not (v.9) “clear the conscience.”

Especially because it covered only one year. They had to go through the whole thing again next year and the year after that. And it didn’t get down to the heart. It didn’t really address that feeling of “dirty, dirty, dirty.” It wasn’t enough.  The old covenant. The old sanctuary. The old priesthood. The old sacrifice was not enough.

But there was new one coming! Look at the end of verse 10 again. These are external regulations...

“...applying until the time of the new order.”

When is that? When Jesus came. Look at verse 11.

“When Christ came as high priest of the good things that are already here, he went through the greater and more perfect tabernacle that is not man-made, that is to say, not a part of this creation.”

Jesus has come!  And He’s a greater high priest. He’s bringing greater things. Things that Hebrews says are already here. He’s bringing a new order. He’s bringing a new covenant.  And He came through a greater (and more perfect) tabernacle.  

Which one is that? The heavenly one! Remember we said last week that we don’t know if that’s literal or not? If there is an actual tabernacle somehow in heaven or if it’s more metaphorical? Either way it’s more real than the earthly one. Because that one is based on this one.

Our great high priest has gone through the heavens to serve in the greater sanctuary.

He went up, up, up to heaven. Up to the Holy Place and to the Holy of Holies! The Most Holy Place in the Universe! The very presence of God.

And how did He get in? What was His access?

He belonged there, of course. He is the Son of God and God the Son. That’s home to Him. He is holy, holy, holy. He didn’t have to have blood for Himself to get in there.

But He was representing us. And we’re sinners. How did He get in? And can we get in? It wasn’t the old way. I can tell you that. Look at verse 12.

“He did not enter by means of the blood of goats and calves; but he entered the Most Holy Place once for all by his own blood, having obtained eternal redemption.”

“By his own blood.”

The most precious thing in the world. He’s talking about the Cross. He’s talking about how Jesus was sacrificed. How Jesus died a sacrificial death. Blood. Jesus did not die peacefully in His sleep. Jesus was killed. He was crucified. He was sacrificed. Jesus was a human sacrifice. And that’s how He entered in. You see that in verse 12?

“He did not enter by means of the blood of goats and calves; but he entered the Most Holy Place once for all by his own blood...”

#1. HE ENTERED THE MOST HOLY PLACE.

I have three brief points this morning which all dwell on what Jesus did by His own blood, and the first is this: He entered the Most Holy Place by His own blood. It was His worthy sacrifice that gained Jesus entrance into the Holy of Holies in heaven.

I don’t know what that was like. I can’t begin to imagine. I think we get kind of glimpse of it in Revelation chapter 4 and 5. But really that’s a different set of symbols exploding over there.

Our great high priest Jesus goes up and up and up through the heavens and into the Holy Place and then marches right into the Holy of Holies by the matchless merits of His sacrificial death. “I’m here by my own blood.”  And that means that you and I can be there, too.

I think that’s why when Jesus died, the curtain in the temple on earth was torn in two. From top to bottom. To symbolize the access that we now have because of the blood of Jesus Christ.

We can go in to where He is holy, holy, holy. That’s because we have been bought with that blood. That’s what redemption means in verse 12. “He entered the Most Holy Place, once for all by his own blood, having obtained eternal redemption.”

#2. HE OBTAINED ETERNAL REDEMPTION.

That’s also talking about what Jesus did on the cross. He redeemed His people. That means He bought them back. We were enslaved to sin and liable to judgment.  But Jesus died to pay for our sins and buy us back to Him. We are redeemed! 

Church, how long is our redemption good for? When does it wear off? When does our redemption expire? Is it good for a year? Until the next Yom Kippur? Until next Christmas? Next New Year’s? Next Easter? No, what kind of redemption is it? 

Eternal redemption. We have been bought back by the blood of Christ, and we cannot be lost again. Our salvation is forever. Why? Because Jesus lives forever, right? We saw in that in chapter 7. Our great high priest is a priest forever because He always lives to intercede for us (7:25). He is indestructible.

Jesus came back to life. And then He ascended to the Most Holy Place and entered by His blood.

And nobody can force Him out! And therefore nobody can force us out. He has obtained for us an eternal redemption! Isn’t that good news? How does that make you feel? That’ll get you out of bed won’t it?! That will help you keep going!

He obtained for us an eternal redemption because His sacrifice was not just by His own blood but “once for all.”

Remember we saw those words in chapter 7, verse 27 and said that Hebrews is going to repeat that phrase over and over again until it’s embedded in our brains?

“Once for all.” (7:27)
“Once for all.” (9:12)
“Once for all.” (10:2)
“Once for all.” (10:10)

We need those words. The sacrifice of Jesus Christ does not need to be repeated. It cannot be repeated. It won’t be repeated. Our redemption doesn’t need to be repeated.  It is once for all by His own blood.

So we are forever free. And forever cleansed.

#3. HE CLEANSES OUR CONSCIENCES.

Look at verse 13. He’s going back again to the first covenant and showing how insufficient it was. V.13

“The blood of goats and bulls and the ashes of a heifer sprinkled on those who are ceremonially unclean sanctify them so that they are outwardly clean.  How much more, then, will the blood of Christ, who through the eternal Spirit offered himself unblemished to God, cleanse our consciences from acts that lead to death, so that we may serve the living God!” (vv.13-14).

Wow! Do you see his logic there? The old sacrifices were good because they provided an external cleansing. Deeply symbolic and effective to a great extent. But only skin deep. They couldn’t clear the conscience.

How much more...that’s an argument from the lesser to the greater.  How much more effective is the blood of Christ? The sacrificial death of Christ. When Jesus gave Himself to obtain eternal redemption through the power of the eternal Spirit, His blood went deeper. It went down into the conscience. It went down into the heart. It goes down inside of us and cleanses our consciences. So that we can be totally forgiven and even feel forgiven! We can know that we’re forgiven! We can draw near to God.

He says that the blood cleanses our consciences from acts that lead to death. That could mean “dead works,” as in old covenant ways of trying to get to God that really don’t work. But I think he just means sin.

He means that worst thing you and I have ever done.

Acts that lead to death.
Acts that deserve death.
Our sin deserves death. 

Not just the worst things we’ve ever done, but every sin that we have committed deserves death. 

But the Blood of Christ, the unblemished Lamb of God, the perfect sacrifice, holy, blameless, pure, undefiled blood...cleanses our conscience!

If Jesus is your high priest, you are forgiven. Your sins, the worst thing you ever did, the worst thing you ever wanted to do, the worst thing you ever thought about doing, the worst thing you dreamed about doing is forgiven!

It’s cleansed. It’s not on your record. It’s not on your heart! It doesn’t have to be on your conscience. 

You’re not dirty, dirty, dirty. You’re clean, clean, clean because of the blood of Christ. At the very core of your being.

Take that into yourself. That’s the truest thing about you. That’s how precious and powerful is the blood of Jesus Christ!

And think about this. Jesus chose this for you and me. The bulls and goats and calves and heifers and lambs did not offer themselves for the Israelites. They didn’t chose to go to slaughter.

But our high priest did. It took the power of the eternal Spirit, but He offered Himself to God. For us. And that changes us on the inside forever.

That’s true for everyone who believes in Jesus as their Lord, Savior, and High Priest. I hope that’s true of everyone in this room. If it is not true of you yet, what are you waiting for? Jesus Christ has come as the high priest of the good things that are already here. Get them for yourselves while you can. Turn from your sin and put your trust in the great high priest who has entered the Most Holy Place once for all by His own blood, having obtained eternal redemption for all who put their faith in Him.

Here’s the one last point of application I want to make before we sing. And that’s the last phrase of verse 14. What good is it that Jesus’ blood cleanses our conscience? Here’s the effect. Verse 14.

“...so that we may serve the living God.”

We can come to God. We can draw near. We have access! And we can serve Him. We can live for Jesus!

We can talk about Him out there in the world. We can teach our children about Him in our homes and down that hallway. Our Challenge Group can serve Kansas City. Our Crisis Response team can serve Ft Myers. 

We can get up out of bed tomorrow and identify as God’s own servants.

Forgiven. Cleansed by Jesus’ own blood.


***

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
12. "We Speak Like This" - Hebrews 6:4-12
13. "An Anchor for the Soul" - Hebrews 6:13-20
Bonus Message: "Fix Your Eyes on Jesus" - 2026 West Branch Baccalaureate
14. "In the Order of Melchizedek" - Hebrews 7:1-19
15. "A Priest Forever" - Hebrews 7:20-28

Sunday, July 05, 2026

“Better Promises” [Matt's Messages]

“Better Promises”
Fixing Our Eyes on Jesus
The Letter to the Hebrews
Lanse Evangelical Free Church
July 5, 2026 :: Hebrews 8:1-13  

What is keeping you going these days?

There are a lot of things that threaten to knock us off course, aren’t there?

There are a lot of distractions out there. So many troubling things are happening in our families, community, nation, and world. So many loud voices are trying to steal our attention through our phones, our TV’s, our culture. What was it this week for you? ...

And there are many many things that threaten to discourage us. Things that beat us down. Sometimes it’s hard to keep going. Sometimes it’s hard to get out of bed.

Anybody have a hard time getting out of bed?

I don’t mean that you’re sleepy and comfy there and want to hit the snooze button again. I mean you’re scared and depressed and anxious and de-motivated and discouraged.

And even if you get out of bed, you are just going through the motions in life, just covering the bases–not joyfully fulfilling your purpose as a follower of Jesus Christ and living each day for Him. 

It’s easy to fall into that. Especially when you have a real sense of your own failings and shortcomings and weaknesses and sinfulness. You feel guilt and shame. You know that you are not what you should be.  And so it’s hard to get out of bed and keep going. 

What is keeping you going these days? What is getting you out of bed?

The pastor who wrote this letter to these Hebrew Christians knew that they were struggling to keep going. They were tempted to quit. They were tempted to throw in the towel which would be worst thing ever for them to do.  

So he wrote these anxious Christians this letter with this message:

Fix your eyes on Jesus.

Because He is greater. Jesus is better. Jesus is worthy of our attention, and He’s more worthy than anything else. And if we fix our eyes on Him, we can keep going and going and going.

Jesus is greater. Jesus is better. This writer is laser-focused on convincing his readers (and therefore us) that this is true. Jesus is better.

He loves that word “better” or “greater” or “superior.”  We’ve seen a lot of comparisons and contrasts in this book so far, and there are more to come.

In verse 6 of chapter 8, he says it 3 times. Jump down to verse 6. He says:

“But the ministry Jesus has received is as superior to theirs as the covenant of which he is mediator is superior to the old one, and it is founded on better promises.”

There’s our title for today, “Better Promises.”

These are the kind of promises from God that will get you out of bed if you can really take them to heart.

We’ve reached the heart of the Book of Hebrews which we’ve said could be summed up with what three words?

Great High Priest.

His readers (knew what we often miss) that we all need a great high priest. We all need a great high priest to safely represent us to a holy God.

His readers knew that because they knew all about priests. They had priests. We call them the “Levitical Priests.” They were the priests that the Law of Moses prescribed in the Old Covenant (the Old Testament), and they were all from the Tribe of Levi and more specifically all from the sub-tribe of Aaron, Moses’s brother, the first high priest of Israel.

The Levitical priests represented the people of Israel to the holy God of Israel with gifts of thanksgiving and sacrifices for sin.

And once a year on the Day of Atonement, the high priest would offer a sacrifice for himself and then take a sacrifice of atonement, not just in the the holy place, but the Holy of Holies, the Most Holy Place behind the curtain and present that offering at the Mercy Seat, at the Atonement Cover at the Ark of the Covenant which stood for the very throne of God.

They knew that. But they needed to know (and the Old Testament taught when you paid close enough attention to it), that God had promised to send another kind of high priest. A better kind of high priest.

#1. BETTER PRIEST.

A priest that doesn’t come from Team Levi or Team Aaron, but from another team, a more ancient team, a more enduring team. A team whose members are not just priests but kings at the same time.

What team am I talking about? Team Melchizedek!

In Psalm 110, the LORD promised David’s Lord, the Messiah that He would be a priest. Psalm 110, verse 4.

“The LORD has sworn and will not change his mind: ‘You are a priest forever, in the order of Melchizedek.’”

The last two weeks as we’ve studied chapter 7, we’ve unpacked both of those phrases.

First, the order of Melchizedek, of which Jesus is the greatest team member of all time. 

Second, that Jesus is a priest forever in that order, on that team.

I won’t go back over it all, but remember the list of the contrasts we saw last week between Team Levi and Team Melchizedek? The Levitical Priesthood versus Jesus’ Priesthood.

Which one looked better?

Team Levi wasn’t bad. Team Levi was God’s own idea.

But Team Melchizedek?! His team is so much better. Especially because Jesus is alive. He is now indestructible. Jesus cannot die.

Did you think about that at all this week? What kind of a high priest He can be because He lives forever and ever? “Because he always lives to intercede for” us (Hebrews 7:25)!

Now, in case you’re wondering if this is a side issue for this letter or a rabbit trail that the author has gotten off on, he says this in verse 1:

“The point of what we are saying is this: We do have such a high priest, who sat down at the right hand of the throne of the Majesty in heaven, and who serves in the sanctuary, the true tabernacle set up by the Lord, not by man.”

This isn’t a rabbit trail. All of this Psalm 110 stuff. All this Melchizedek stuff is the main point. We need a high priest like this, and we have a high priest like this. His name is Jesus!

“We do have such a high priest who sat down at the right hand of the throne of the Majesty in heaven.”

If anyone asks you what is the point of Hebrews, you can say, “Great High Priest.”

Notice that he says once again that Jesus sat down. That’s important him, and it should be important to us. He said it in the very first paragraph of this letter. And he’s repeated it a few times. He’s going to come back to that again in chapter 10 and chapter 12.

“Jesus sat down.”

Why is that important? What would you say to that? I’m not going to tell you more today. You think about it.  Why is it important that Jesus sat down? There are several reasons. (And yes, it has something to do with His priesthood being better.) 

Where did He sit down?

Church, where is Jesus right now? “At the right hand of the throne of the Majesty in heaven.”

In heaven. That’s important, too. In fact, that’s what he’s stressing in these first five verses of chapter 8. It’s the location of His priesthood. Jesus’ ministry as a priest is better because it’s located in heaven. You see that in verse 2?

“We do have such a high priest, who sat down at the right hand of the throne of the Majesty in heaven, and who serves in the sanctuary, the true tabernacle set up by the Lord, not by man.”

What is he talking about? Where does Jesus do His priestly ministry? In the holy place in heaven. 

Did you know there is a sanctuary in heaven? I don’t know if that’s more metaphor or if there is something literally in the heavenlies like that. It’s hard to think in those categories.

Regardless, it’s more real than what we consider real.

Jesus serves as our great high priest in the “true tabernacle,” the true worship tent that was pitched–not by Moses and his team at the end of Exodus but–by God Himself! Jesus serves as a great high priest in the very presence of God. What does our memory verse say? He “has gone through the heavens...”

And He takes with Him an offering. That’s what high priests do. Look at verse 3.

“Every high priest is appointed to offer both gifts and sacrifices, and so it was necessary for this one also to have something to offer.”

Every high priest does. What was the sacrifice He brought? Was it the blood of bulls and goats?

No. What did we read last week in chapter 7, verse 27? “He sacrificed for their sins once for all when he offered himself.” We’re going to learn more about that in chapter 9. 

Verse 4 keeps us focused on the location of Jesus’ ministry. Verse 4.

“If he were on earth, he would not be a priest, for there are already men who offer the gifts prescribed by the law.”

Think about that for a second. He says that Jesus if he were on earth, he wouldn’t be a priest in the temple. Did you ever think about how Jesus never went into the temple as a priest? He never went into the holy of holies.

He could have! He belonged there! He cleaned out the temple and said it was His house. His Father’s house. He cleaned house. But He didn’t take in the blood of bulls and goats or spotless lambs into the Most Holy Place. No, He died on earth, making Himself an offering, and then He passed through the heavens and into the heavenly tabernacle and presented His blood directly in God’s presence.  

In the realest temple in the universe! The tabernacle on earth and the temple were just shadows of the one in heaven. That’s what he says in verse 5.

“They [Team Aaron’s priests] serve at a sanctuary that is a copy and shadow of what is in heaven. This is why Moses was warned when he was about to build the tabernacle: ‘See to it that you make everything according to the pattern shown you on the mountain’” (vv.5-6).

That’s Exodus chapter 25, verse 40. And it’s mind-blowing. Apparently, Moses was shown a pattern, a blueprint(?), a template, or map of some kind on top of Mount Sinai of what it’s like (so to speak) in the heavenly temple and he was to build the tabernacle (the mobile temple) according to that pattern.

So that we could catch a glimpse of what it was like in heaven!

That means that tabernacle and the temple were special for their day, but they were just a “copy and shadow.”

Which is better: the copy or the original?
Which is better: the shadow or the substance?

The original. The substance.

So why would we cling to the shadow? Why would be cling to the copy?

He’s going to say more about this in chapter 9, but you can feel how many more contrasts he’s making here for us to see how much better Jesus is as our great high priest.

Let’s fill out the chart.

Levitical priests minister on earth. Jesus serves in heaven!

Levitical priests minister in a sanctuary that men built (by God’s design!) but Jesus ministers in the sanctuary that the Lord build by Himself!

Levitical priests minister in a copy or shadow temple. Jesus serves in the true tabernacle.

Which one is better? It’s really no contest.

The only thing that might be a little better about the one on the left is that they could see it. You have to be reminded where Jesus is. We don’t see Him right now. We have to remind each other. 

Church, where is Jesus? He’s seated at the right hand of the throne of the Majesty in heaven. Which is SO much better. Verse 6.

“But the [great high priest] ministry Jesus has received is as superior to theirs [Aaron’s sons] as the covenant of which he is mediator is superior to the old one, and it is founded on better promises.”

#2. BETTER PROMISES.

Now here, the writer is not leaving the subject of Jesus’s priesthood. He’s got a lot more to say on that. But he’s going to switch the focus a little bit from what kind of a priest Jesus to what kind of a covenant His priesthood is connected to.

You see his logic? Look at verse 6 again.

“But the [high priestly] ministry Jesus has received is as superior [contrast word “better”] to theirs [the Levitical priests] as the covenant [that word showed up for the first time last chapter, but it’s going to get a lot of treatment in the next few chapters] of which he is mediator is superior [better] to the old one, and it is founded on better promises.”

So Jesus’ priesthood is better.
The covenant He represents is better.
And it’s better because the promises of the covenant are better.

Now, what’s a covenant? A covenant is like a contract. It’s a binding agreement on two or more parties. And in the ancient Near East it was a big deal.

The Bible is full of covenants. Covenants between humans. And covenants between and God and humans.

We have learned over the years about the Abrahamic Covenant.  Genesis 12, 15, 17 and so forth.

And we have learned about the Davidic Covenant. 2 Samuel 7. What do we typically call the covenant that was connected to the Levitical Priesthood?

We call it the Mosaic Covenant because it came with the Law of Moses. Another name for it is the Old Covenant. Or here it’s called (v.7) “that first covenant.” And we’ll see why in a second.

Let me ask you a question:

Was the Mosaic Covenant good or bad? Was it a good deal for God’s people or a bad one?

It was very good! The Mosaic Law Covenant was a gracious gift to a sinful people.  It came after God rescued His people from Egypt, and when they understood that He was making a covenant with them and providing them with a priesthood to safely represent them to Him in a holy sanctuary, they were being given a tremendous gift!

They were being told what God is like and what He likes! They were given His Law which is a wonderful thing. Read Psalm 119 to find out just how precious the Law was. To know what God wants!  To have priests with sacrifices to safely represent you to God when you sin against His law.

What a tremendous gift the Old Covenant was!

But it was also weak. It was also...what did he call it two weeks ago in chapter 7, verse 19? “Weak and useless.” It was ineffective. It was inadequate.  It was good, but it wasn’t good enough.

And that was on purpose. Because God always had a plan for another covenant, another binding agreement, another big deal. Look at verse 7.

“[Jesus’ covenant of which He is the mediator is superior...] For if there had been nothing wrong with that first covenant, no place would have been sought for another. [But there was something wrong with it.] But God found fault with the people and said: ‘The time is coming, declares the Lord, when I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel and with the house of Judah” (vv.7-8).

This is what Keagan read to us from Jeremiah chapter 31:31-34. In fact, this is the longest quotation from the Old Testament copied and pasted into the New Testament. The writer to the Hebrews is switching over from explaining and expounding on Psalm 110 to explaining and expounding on Jeremiah 31.

The promise of the “new covenant.”


I went back this week and listened to my message on Jeremiah 31 in that series to give me a refresher. 

Jeremiah was a broken record about the broken covenant. Remember that? For forty years, Jeremiah was a broken record about how the nation of Judah had broken their covenant with God. They had spiraled into idolatry again and again. And they were going into exile. That’s why Daniel takes place in Babylon and Esther takes place in Persia.

The Old Covenant, as glorious as it was, did not transform the people of God. They needed something...better.

And God promised to send it. “The time is coming, declares the Lord, when I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel and with the house of Judah.”

Do you remember that phrase, “the time is coming” or “the days are coming?”

It was far in the future for Jeremiah. But God had promised it, and it was sure to come. He promised it to Israel (Israel and Judah). He isn’t starting over with a whole new group, though we find out in the New Testament that the Gentiles get grafted into this promise, too (see Romans 11). We are included even if we aren’t Jews. We get to be a part of the better covenant. Different from the first one. Verse 9.

“It will not be like the covenant I made with their forefathers when I took them by the hand to lead them out of Egypt, because they did not remain faithful to my covenant, and I turned away from them, declares the Lord.”

There’s some scary words. “I turned away from them, declares the Lord.”

This new covenant will be one where the Lord never turns away from His people.  And where His people never turn away from Him. Look at verse 10.

“This is the covenant I will make with the house of Israel after that time, declares the Lord. I will put my laws in their minds and write them on their hearts. I will be their God, and they will be my people. No longer will a man teach his neighbor, or a man his brother, saying, 'Know the Lord,' because they will all know me, from the least of them to the greatest. For I will forgive their wickedness and will remember their sins no more.’” (vv.10-12).

That’s the new covenant. And it’s got better promises for God’s people. Can you see them? I noted at least three.

- DEEPER CHANGE.

In the new covenant, God promises not just to give them His law, but to embed it in their minds and their hearts. Inside the minds and hearts of every true member of the New Covenant.

In the Old Covenant, you could be a member of the covenant community and not be transformed by the covenant. But in the New Covenant, every genuine member of the new covenant community gets a new heart! The Holy Spirit takes up residence inside of us and gives us a new heart and begins the inevitable transformation of our hearts and minds.

The New Covenant guarantees true life change. It doesn’t happen all at once, and it doesn’t happen in a straight line. But it happens for all true New Covenant members. Guaranteed.

Isn’t that encouraging? Won’t that get you out of bed?! That will keep you going. 

The LORD has promised to change you from the inside out and conform you into the image of your great high priest, the Lord Jesus Christ. And not just some of us, but all of us who are believers.  Deeper change.

- WIDER KNOWLEDGE.

“I will be their God, and they will be my people. No longer will a man teach his neighbor, or a man his brother, saying, ‘Know the Lord,’ because they will all know me, from the least of them to the greatest” (vv.10b-11).

Now, that doesn’t mean that we don’t have teachers in the New Covenant. It means that every single person who is a New Covenant member has the Lord inside of us teaching us. And that all who belong to Him know Him personally. From the littlest kid who believes to the oldest Christian who lives.

And there are no class distinctions. It’s not just the priests or the pastors who know God. It’s every one of us in this room.

Sometimes, people joke with me about the weather. They’ll say, “Can’t you do something about the weather. You have that special connection with God, you know?” And they are joking about whether or not I can change the weather.

But I always say, “You can have the knowledge of God that I do.”

Every single true Christians knows God. And one day, everyone everywhere that lives on the earth will know Him in that way, too. The knowledge of the LORD will cover the globe like the waters cover the sea!

That day is coming. That’s a better promise. And that’ll get you out of bed. That will keep you going.

And here’s why we can know Him this way:

Because our sin will not stand in our way.

Deeper change.
Wider knowledge.

- FULL FORGIVENESS.

Look at verse 12. It’s from Jeremiah 31:34.

“For I will forgive their wickedness and will remember their sins no more.”

This was said to Jeremiah during some of the darkest days of Judah. God was turning away from His people and sending them into exile. But He had a plan to provide a new covenant that was full of superior promises include the promise of full forgiveness for all of God’s people.

And now that covenant has come. The last days have come (Heb 1:1-3)!

Jesus Christ is the mediator (the guarantee and the go-between) of the new covenant. He is the great high priest of the new covenant. And all of these better promises are being fulfilled for us through Him.

Isn’t that encouraging? How do we apply this passage to our lives today?

The author doesn’t directly say in the passage we’re studying today. But it’s clear from the rest of the book how he wants us to respond to it. I can think of three applications right off the top of my head:

- Be Encouraged
- Be Steadfast
- Be Thankful

Just thinking about how great a high priest Jesus is and how great these promises are is so encouraging to me. This is what I need to hear. I am going to be changed. I know the Lord and I am His, and I am forgiven. That will keep you going. Especially when you realize that these promises are strong as Jesus’ life is strong. As long as Jesus continues to live, these promises will be true for His people. And He will never die again. Be encouraged.

Be steadfast. What does our memory verse say? “Since we have a great high priest who has gone through the heavens, Jesus the Son of God, let us hold firmly to the faith we profess” (Hebrews 4:14).

Hold firmly. Don’t go backwards. Don’t let go. That’s the point of verse 13 as we round out the chapter. Verse 13.

“By calling this covenant ‘new,’ he has made the first one obsolete; and what is obsolete and aging will soon disappear.”

The Old Covenant was going to disappear. It was temporary. It was being phased out. The New Covenant is here now, so the Old Covenant is old. You can’t go back to it. But why would you want to 
The New Covenant is so much better. Fix your eyes on the high priest of the New Covenant and don’t let go.

And guess what? He will hold you fast. Deeper change. Wider knowledge. Full forgiveness.

Because of Jesus. 

Be thankful.

Our better high priest offered Himself once for all so that the better promises of the New Covenant would all be fulfilled for us. What can we say but, “Thank you?!”


***

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
12. "We Speak Like This" - Hebrews 6:4-12
13. "An Anchor for the Soul" - Hebrews 6:13-20
Bonus Message: "Fix Your Eyes on Jesus" - 2026 West Branch Baccalaureate
14. "In the Order of Melchizedek" - Hebrews 7:1-19
15. "A Priest Forever" - Hebrews 7:20-28

Sunday, June 28, 2026

“A Priest Forever” [Matt's Messages]

“A Priest Forever”
Fixing Our Eyes on Jesus
The Letter to the Hebrews
Lanse Evangelical Free Church
June 28, 2026 :: Hebrews 7:20-28  

Fix your eyes on our great high priest. His name is Jesus.

We’ve reached the heart of the book of Hebrews where the writer is dwelling on the subject of the high priesthood of Jesus Christ.

He’s mentioned it all along, and he’s tried to get his readers to focus on it, but he had to grab back their attention a few times. Now he’s got us focused on it.

Jesus is our great high priest. We don’t think about that enough today. We don’t realize how important it really is. Last year, as a church, we focused on the kingship of Jesus. We studied the Book of Daniel that presented Jesus as the coming Son of Man Who was coming as the King of Kings (see Daniel 7:14).

And He is! That’s right for us to focus upon His kingship. Jesus is Lord!

But He is not just a king. He is also a priest. He is not just our ruler. He is our representative. He safely represents us before a holy God. Jesus is our great high priest.  He’s not just the King of Kings. He’s the Priest of Priests.



You don’t want to go alone before a holy God. Not if you are a sinner. If you are a sinner, you want a priest and you want an atoning sacrifice being presented by that priest so that you can approach a holy God. 

The original readers of this letter knew that. We often don’t realize it, but it was ingrained in them by their Bibles (the Old Testament) and by the priesthood that they were familiar with. The Levitical Priesthood. The priests that came from the Israelite tribe of Levi–specifically the sons of Aaron, Moses’ brother, the first high priest of Israel. 

They knew all about priests because they lived with them. They knew that we need a priest. But they needed convinced (or at least reminded again) that Jesus was the priest that we need. They were tempted to fall back on the Levitical priesthood, the Aaronic priesthood. Team Levi. Team Aaron. Maybe they were good enough?

“I’m not so sure about whether or not we need to stick with Jesus.”

Especially because sticking with Jesus means sticking your neck out. Sticking with Jesus will get you into hot water. And it might cost you your life. Is sticking with Jesus worth that?

This pastor is trying to convince them (and therefore us) that He is. Jesus is greater than Aaron and his sons ever were or ever could ever be.

Jesus is the priest we need, and Jesus is our priest...forever.

“A Priest Forever”

I said last week that that will be our title for today. “A Priest Forever.” 

Where do those words come from? They come from Psalm 110. The Psalm that Hannah just read for us. That Psalm (we learned last week) starts out as a prophetic promise to the coming Messiah that He be victorious. Great David’s greatest Son will be invited to sit at God’s right hand until the LORD makes all of his enemies a footstool for His feet (Psalm 110:1-3).

He will be a conquering king. But He will not be just a king. He’s also going to be a priest.

Psalm 110:4 says, “The LORD has sworn and will not change his mind: ‘You are a priest forever, in the order of Melchizedek.”

A priest forever. 

Now, last week, we focused on that last part, “in the order of Melchizedek.” 

We learned that the Messiah to come will be on Team Melchizedek. And we talked a lot about what that means. I won’t repeat it all today. If you weren’t here, you might want to go back and listen, watch, or read last week’s message.

The basic idea is that Team Melchizedek is greater than Team Levi or Team Aaron. There’s a lot of reasons for that; read the first part of the chapter.  Team Melchizedek is greater than Team Levi or Team Aaron. And Jesus is going to be on Team Melchizedek.

His priesthood is better, and that also means we get a better law (v.12) and a better hope by which we draw near to God (v.19).

And a big part of what makes Team Melchizedek better is that his priesthood is forever.

The original Melchizedek in Genesis was a shadowy figure that showed up and then disappeared with no genealogy. No record of his birth or his death. And so his priesthood was kind of open-ended. If he didn’t get marked down as dead, you could kind of say that his priesthood was still active.

And Psalm 110 predicted that Jesus’s priesthood would be open-ended like Melchizedek’s priesthood. 
He will be a priest forever. It says this in Psalm 110, and then five more times those words are repeated in your Bible–all five times in the Letter to the Hebrews (5:6, 6:20, 7:3, 7:17, 7:21)! Three of them in this chapter. Jesus is a priest forever.

Because Jesus lives forever. Jesus died on the Cross, making atonement for our sins. But He came back to life, and now He is indestructible. Verse 16 says He is a priest based on “the power of an indestructible life.”

If you shot Jesus right now, point blank, He would not die. Not if you shot Him with a nuke. He cannot die. Jesus lives in the power of an indestructible life. And so He’s (Psalm 110!) “A priest forever.”

Just think about what that means! That means that He won’t change. Whatever kind of a priest He is He is forever and ever and ever and ever and ever. And that’s what this last part of the chapter focuses on today.

I have three points this morning to summarize what I think verses 20 to 28 have to say about Jesus’ eternal priesthood, and here’s the first one:

#1. PROMISED FOREVER.

All three of these are the best news ever. Any one of them is enough to get you out of bed and keep you going as a Christian. 

Jesus is promised forever as our great high priest. Look at verse 20. He comes back to the idea he brought up before in chapter 6 of an oath (see 6:16-18). Verse 20.

“And it [Jesus’ priesthood] was not without an oath! Others became priests without any oath, but he became a priest with an oath when God said to him: ‘The Lord has sworn and will not change his mind: 'You are a priest forever.'’”

Here’s what he’s saying. He’s pointing out another difference between the Levitical High Priests and Jesus’ High Priesthood.

Did God ever promise Aaron with a solemn oath that he and his sons will be priests forever? The answer is “almost.” God did call Aaron and his sons to be priests in an ongoing priesthood, generation after generation (see Exodus 28:1, 29:9,28). But, no, He never made an oath to Aaron. He never promised to not change things up. He never promised that Aaron would be a priest forever.

But in Psalm 110, verse 4, He did make such an oath to Jesus. “The Lord has sworn and will not change his mind: ‘You are a priest forever.’” God swore! He didn’t have to. Just Him saying it would make it true. But the LORD went on to swear it, to make an oath to the Son. In other words, God is saying, “If I don’t keep this promise, then I will die.”

And here’s the promise: “You are a priest forever.”

You see how important that is? Here’s what that means for you and me. You and I don’t ever have to be afraid that God is going to change the deal on us. We don’t have to worry that the deal is going to change.

I don’t know about you, but I hate it when the deal changes for the worse, and I have no power over it. 

“Well, yeah, that was the rule then, but this is the rule now. And you just have to live with it.”

“Well, we’ve got someone new in charge, and they want to do it this way. And you just have to live with it.”

It’s bad enough for small stuff (like terms and conditions or tech stuff that I didn’t ask to change but here it’s changed anyway), but what about important stuff?

How do we know that our deal with God is safe and secure? Look at verse 22.

“Because of this oath, Jesus has become the guarantee of a better covenant.”

The guarantee. Jesus is the guarantee. He’s the security deposit. He’s the surety. He’s the guarantor.

You would have to kill Jesus again to undo this covenant. That’s what he’s saying. You would have to somehow kill Jesus to undo this covenant. And Jesus cannot be killed again. He’s indestructible. That’s how safe our deal is!  That’s how secure it is. That’s how sure our hope is. That’s why it’s an anchor for the soul, right? 

Nothing on Earth can change the terms of our covenant with God because God has made an oath that Jesus is a priest forever.

How does that make you feel? Does that help you to carry on? Fix your eyes on your great high priest. 

“I know that while in heaven he stands
No tongue can bid me thence depart.”
- Charitie Lees (Smith) Bancroft

And He’s a priest forever. Can you see how much greater Jesus is than Aaron? And how much greater is the new covenant! Did you notice that language in verse 22? “Jesus has become the guarantee of a better covenant.”

That’s the first time the word “covenant” is used in the Letter to the Hebrews. It will not be the last. Actually, it’s shows up 16 more times in this letter.  The next three chapters are going to be demonstrate for the Hebrews and for us that the New Covenant is much better than the Old Covenant. And the Old Covenant was good! It was given by God. But the New Covenant is so much better. And one of the reasons is that the priesthood of the New Covenant is eternal is because the High Priest of the New Covenant was promised forever by God’s own oath.

#2. PLACED FOREVER.

Jesus is placed forever as the high priest. Look at verse 23. He’s going to carry on the comparison between the two kinds of priests. Verse 23.

“Now there have been many of those priests [Levitical priests, Aaronic priests], since death prevented them from continuing in office; but because Jesus lives forever, he has a permanent priesthood” (vv.23-24).

You see the contrast? Maybe make a comparison chart on your bulletin?

Levitical, no oath. Jesus, oath!

Levitical, many priests. Jesus, one priest. 

Why were there so many Levitical priests? The historian Josephus counted up at least 83 high priests from Aaron to the destruction of the temple in AD 70. The Talmud estimated there were over 318!

It’s because they all died, right? Aaron died. And his son Eleazar because high priest. Eleazar died and his son Phinehas became high priest.  And he died. And he died. And he died. And he died. And he died. And he died. And he died. And he died.  And when they died, they were no longer the high priest.

This is a fragile system, isn’t it? What if they didn’t have any sons? What if they all died? What happens to the people if all of the high priests died?

We think, “No big deal. We can do without priests.” But that’s wrong. We need a high priest. That leaves us sinner alone with a holy God. You don’t want to be alone with a holy God if you are a sinner.

What happens to the people if all of the priest die?

Here’s the principle: Dead priests do not save. Dead priests make terrible priests before God.

V.23, “Death prevented them from continuing in office.” But! V.24 “...but because Jesus lives forever, he has a permanent priesthood.” 

Permanent! He’s placed in this position forever. Your great high priest cannot be dislodged. To take away His priesthood, you would have to somehow kill Jesus again. And that cannot happen. He’s indestructible. 

And that means that He doesn’t need a successor. There don’t need to be any more great high priests. We have the final one. The Pope in Rome is not our great high priest. And neither is anyone else that might claim to take Jesus’ place. 

Including anyone that we’d like to take His place.  Sometimes, we’d like to have a different priest. That’s how we act. As if someone else could represent us better. But Jesus will have no successors. You and I will never have another high priest. Jesus is placed forever. 

He is our priest yesterday, today, and forever. Hebrews 13:8 does say, “Jesus Christ is the same.” Our permanent priest.

And here’s what that means for us today. Look at verse 25. It may be the most encouraging thing you hear all week. Verse 25.

“Therefore [because Jesus lives forever] he is able to save completely those who come to God through him, because he always lives to intercede for them.”

Isn’t that good news?! Doesn’t that fill your heart with a song? Isn’t that a perpetual motion machine? That will keep you going! 

Because Jesus lives forever “he is able to save completely those who come to God through him...”

Completely! Some versions say, “to the uttermost!” To the fullest extent. Both in quality and duration. That means that there will be nothing about us that isn’t saved. Body and soul. And forever!

There isn’t going to be this one little corner of our lives that isn’t redeemed. Everything gets a makeover and everything gets rescued! “Rescued, reconciled, and renewed.” Forever!

We aren’t going to be saved by half. We aren’t going to be saved by 75%. We are going to be 100% saved for 100% of eternity. Because Jesus is 100% alive!

Dead priests don’t save, but ever-living priests save completely. Jesus will always, always, always be your great high priest. [Thank you, Michael Kruger for saying, “always, always, always” on page 104 of your commentary.]

Jesus will always, always, always, always, always be your great high priest.

Look at verse 25 again. Jesus “is able to save completely those who come to God through him, because he always lives to intercede for them.”

Church, where is Jesus right now? He’s at the right hand of Majesty on High.

Church, what is Jesus doing right now? He’s interceding for us. He’s praying for us. He’s pleading the merits of His own blood for us.

“Before the throne of God above
I have a strong a perfect plea;
A great High Priest whose name is Love,
Who ever lives and pleads for me.”
- Charitie Lees (Smith) Bancroft

Ever, ever, ever. Always, always, always.

You see why I say we don’t think about His priesthood enough?

You are never going to be on your own. You never have to go before a holy God on your own. Jesus is alive, and He never stops interceding for you. To stop Jesus from interceding for you, Christian, someone would have to kill Jesus again, and that is impossible. He is indestructible. He is able to save completely (and He is saving completely) those who come to God through Him.

Have you come to God through Jesus? There is no better way. There is no other way. Jesus is the way.  Come to God through Jesus. You are invited. Draw near. Repent of your sins. Repent of your saviors. Your false saviors. Including yourself. And come to God through Jesus.

He will save you completely. Because He never fails. He never falters. He never falls asleep. I fall asleep while praying all of the time. But our priest never falls asleep at the wheel. He always, always, always lives to intercede for us.

Jesus is the high priest we need. Look at verse 26.

“Such a high priest meets our need–one who is holy, blameless, pure, set apart from sinners, exalted above the heavens.”

What soaring language! Keith put that one on the front of our bulletins this morning. He says that “such a high priest meets our needs.” It literally says that this kind of high priest is fitting or appropriate for us. Not because we deserve a high priest like this. We certainly don’t, but because this is precisely the kind of high priest we need. What kind? A perfect one.

#3. PERFECT FOREVER.

He piles up words to describe how perfect Jesus is.

“Holy, blameless, pure.” Some versions have “innocent and undefiled.” “Unstained.”

There is nothing wrong with Jesus, and there never will be. He is set apart from sinners. He’s in a class of His own. He is holy, holy, holy. And He is “exalted above the heavens.”  He’s passed through the heavens (4:14) and is now at the highest place.

At the right hand of the Majesty on High. And He belongs there. He’s this perfect...and He always will be!

That’s not true of the other high priests.  Look at verse 27.

“Unlike the other high priests, he does not need to offer sacrifices day after day, first for his own sins, and then for the sins of the people. He sacrificed for their sins once for all when he offered himself.”

Aaron and his sons were sinful just like those they represented. They had to offer a sacrifice for themselves before they could offer a sacrifice for the people, And they had to do it again and again and again.

But our great high priest (v.27), “sacrificed for their sins once for all when he offered himself.”

Wow. There is so much there.  The author of this letter thinks so, too. He’s going to repeat these ideas again and again over the next few chapters (9:12, 26, 10:2, 10:10, etc.). He wants us to hear those words, “once for all,” until they are embedded in our souls.

We don’t need many sacrifices today. Jesus’ sacrifice is sufficient. Once for all. And His sacrifice is not just sufficient. It is personal.

Our great high priest did not simply sacrifice a perfect spotless lamb. He was the perfect spotless lamb of God. He offered Himself.

You see how much better our great high priest is than the other priests ever could be?

They were great! But they were weak. Look verse 28.

“For the law [the Mosaic law] appoints as high priests men who are weak; but the oath, which came after the law, [Psalm 110, verse 4] appointed the Son, who has been made perfect forever.”

The Son (Hebrews 1:1-4)! The Son of God was appointed by God to become our Great High Priest.

And He was made perfect. Not because He was imperfect before. But because He became a human and suffered. And suffering (when you do it right) perfects you (cf. Heb 5:9). It completes you. It consecrates you.

Suffering made Jesus the perfectly qualified high priest. And He will be forever.

Because after He suffered, He suffers no more. What suffering made Him cannot be undone. To take away Jesus’ perfection (holy, blameless, pure, set apart), you would have to kill him all over again.

And, church, that’s never going to happen! Jesus is perfect forever, which means your salvation is perfect forever. His sacrifice is never going to run out of efficacy.

You have nothing to worry about forever! 

Jesus is exactly the kind of priest we need, and we are going to have Him forever and ever and ever and ever.

Jesus is a priest forever. Fix your eyes on Him.

***

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
12. "We Speak Like This" - Hebrews 6:4-12
13. "An Anchor for the Soul" - Hebrews 6:13-20
Bonus Message: "Fix Your Eyes on Jesus" - 2026 West Branch Baccalaureate
14. "In the Order of Melchizedek" - Hebrews 7:1-19