Posted in Through the Bible Devotions

Hearts of stone

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Some “through the bible” thoughts from Hebrews 3 and 4.

“Today, if you hear his voice, do not harden your hearts” (Hebrews 3:8,15; 4:7). The writer quotes Psalm 95 three times. He really wanted to get this point across.

Hardened hearts rebelled and disobeyed. Even after all he had done for them, God’s people refused to trust him.

When are we most likely to harden our hearts? Is it when God tells us something we don’t want to hear? Or commands something we don’t want to do? Or promises something that sounds too good to be true?

Or is it too late? Is that simply the way we are? In Ezekiel 36, God promises to replace idolatrous hearts of stone with Spirit-filled hearts of flesh. The bible says we’re stone-cold dead in sin until God makes us alive in Christ.

A better question is how does God soften my heart? How does he get me to listen and trust him? How does God get me to obey?

Well, for one thing, he gives us each other. “Exhort one another every day, as long as it is called “today,” that none of you may be hardened by the deceitfulness of sin (Hebrews 3:13).

He gives us his son, Jesus Christ, a gift from before the creation of the world (4:3). He dies with our sin and hardened hearts, so we can have his eternally living, beating heart.

I might be hard-headed, stiff-necked, and stubborn. But he knows how to touch my heart with mercy and grace. That’s not only heart-changing. It’s life-changing.

Posted in Through the Bible Devotions

You can count on him

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Some “through the bible” thoughts from Hebrews 10.

“Therefore, brothers, since we have confidence to enter the holy places by the blood of Jesus, by the new and living way that he opened for us through the curtain, that is, through his flesh, and since we have a great priest over the house of God, let us draw near with a true heart in full assurance of faith, with our hearts sprinkled clean from an evil conscience and our bodies washed with pure water. Let us hold fast the confession of our hope without wavering, for he who promised is faithful” (Hebrews 10:19-23).

The writer here refers to “confidence,” “full assurance,” and “without wavering.”

That would be a great place to be, wouldn’t it? Any one of those would be a good place to be, wouldn’t it?

Confidence is elusive. I probably could have done better. Full assurance would mean an absence of doubt. But who doesn’t have lots of questions? On any given day our faith can feel either strong or weak. Who doesn’t waver when the highs and lows of life hit hard?

The key to all that is in the last phrase: “He who promised is faithful” (10:23). God doesn’t change, waver, drift, waffle, yo-yo, flip-flop, or vacillate. He keeps his promises. He does what he says. His word is truth. He is trustworthy. He is the only source of confidence, assurance, and unwavering hope.

Old Faithful (pictured above) used to erupt every 60-70 minutes. Earthquakes have changed that interval to anywhere from 35 to 100 minutes. The geyser isn’t as faithful as it used to be.

My car faithfully starts up every morning. Until it doesn’t and I have to install a new battery. My AC faithfully keeps the house at a comfortable temperature. Until it doesn’t, and I have to call for service. My Amazon orders faithfully arrive within two days. Unless they don’t because of supply chain or shipping delays.

So it can be hard to grasp God’s perfect record of faithfulness. But after some investigation, he always does what he says. He fuels unique confidence, assurance, and unwavering hope.

Posted in Through the Bible Devotions

He’s better

Some “through the bible” thoughts from Hebrews 7-12.

So much of the book of Hebrews is about how Jesus is better. Angels are great. But Jesus is better (Hebrews 1-2). Moses was great. But Jesus is better (Hebrews 3). The list goes on and on. Because of Jesus we have

  • A better hope (7:19)
  • A better covenant (7:22)
  • Better promises (8:6)
  • Better sacrifices (9:23)
  • A better possession (10:34)
  • A better country (11:16)
  • A better life (11:35)
  • A better word (12:24)

Now why would the writer spend so much time on how much better Jesus is? Probably because they, like us, aren’t willing to give up the old.

Just a few weeks into their exodus out of slavery, Israel reminisces about how good things were in Egypt. Not even half way done rebuilding the temple, those who returned from Babylon lamented how nice the old temple was. When Jesus shows up, devout Jews insist that God’s covenant with Abraham is all they need. Paul wrote that Gentiles who believed didn’t need the old covenant customs and regulations. They only needed Christ.

It’s far to easy to retreat into good intentions. “I can do this. I can do better. I will do better.” As if Jesus weren’t enough.

But he is. His perfect life is much better than my attempts to be good. His perfect sacrifice for sin is better than any good intentions I have. His power, glory, faithfulness, justice, righteousness, and love are better than I’ll find in this world’ll find anywhere else in this world.

I need to return to the book of Hebrews often, for a refresher course in all the “betters” I have in Christ.

Posted in Through the Bible Devotions

What does faith look like?

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Some “through the bible” thoughts from Hebrews 10 and 11.

So what does faith look like?

I guess there as many answers as there are answer-ers. For some, faith looks like going to church. For others, it’s traveling far from home on a mission trip. Memorizing bible verses? Praying before meals? Wearing a cross necklace? Being nice. Honest. dependable. Perhaps all of the above.

But perhaps more. In Hebrews 11, faith means looking forward to everything God promised, trusting him, and doing what he says. It means not looking back, but always towards what will be.

Why do that? Because he who promised is faithful (10:23). That’s why faith looks like confidence (10:19), full assurance (10:22), and no wavering (10:23). It’s absolute certainty in God’s mercy and grace that is ours in Christ.