If we deliberately keep on sinning after we have received the knowledge of the truth, no
sacrifice for sins is left (Hebrews 10:26)
Let’s take a quick survey. Put your hand up if you have lived a sinless life. Hmm. I don’t see
any hands. I have been saved for decades and, to be completely honest with you, I cannot say
my performance has been flawless throughout that period. I’m pretty sure I sinned this one
time back in 1987…
Ha! It’s easy for me to make jokes. I’ve been set free. I no longer mine at the pits of religion
with condemnation. I’m drawing from the wells of salvation with joy.
All jokes aside, Hebrews 10:26 is an oft-abused scripture. If you wanted to use this verse to
scare people, there are a couple of angles you could take:
1. You could use this verse to present a “balanced” view of God, like this: “He is a God of
grace
and
he is a God of judgment. You need to love him
and
fear him for he’s a God of
vengeance and a consuming fire. It is a dreadful thing to fall into the hands of the living
God.”
2. You could also use this verse to preach works: “You will be judged according to the light of
your revelation and those who have received the knowledge of the truth will be held to the
highest standard. It’s time for judgment to begin in the house of God. If you fall away it is
impossible to be brought back to repentance!”
What’s the problem with these messages? If you listen to the first one you’re going to come
away thinking that God is schizophrenic, at war with his own good nature. He loves you, but he
doesn’t. It’s unconditional love, with conditions. And if you listen to the second you’ll either
end up a religious fraud or a nervous wreck. You may even wish that you had never heard the
gospel because ignorance is bliss.
The tricky part with these false messages is that they are composed of true statements. Our
God
is
a consuming fire. But any message that tells you that God is double-minded or that the
good news is bad news ought to be rejected. You know that, right? Good. So how do we read
Hebrews 10:26?
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GRACE REMIX
Trampling the Son of God under foot
A key to unpacking this scripture is to recall the audience. Hebrews was written for Hebrews. It
was written for those who had grown up with the “elementary teachings” of the old covenant.
In other words, it’s an
informed
audience. They know about the law, sacrifices, and high priests.
But what they may not appreciate is that the law was only “a shadow of the good things to
come.” The law points to the true high priest Jesus and his eternally perfect sacrifice.
Hebrews was written to reveal Christ and his work so that we may “enter through the new
and living way,” “go on to maturity,” and “draw near to God” (Hebrews 6:1, 10:20,22). That last
one is key. How do I know the two sermonettes above are nonsense? Because neither will
inspire you to draw near to God. Indeed, they will have the opposite effect.
Hebrews 10:26 describes those who have received the knowledge of the truth (i.e., they have
heard the gospel) but they have rejected it. The author compares those who reject grace with
those who reject law:
Anyone who rejected the law of Moses died without mercy on the testimony of two or three
witnesses. How much more severely do you think someone deserves to be punished who
has trampled the Son of God underfoot, who has treated as an unholy thing the blood of the
covenant that sanctified them, and who has insulted the Spirit of grace? (Hebrews 10:28–29)
This passage isn’t describing someone who has embraced Jesus but someone who has spurned
him. Think of Judas who spent time in the company of the Lord. He saw grace and truth in the
flesh. Yet Judas never saw Jesus as anything other than a teacher. Calling Jesus “Rabbi,” as
Judas does in Matthew 26:25, is a bit like calling the President “Mister,” only more so. It’s not
just insulting, it’s unbelief.
Jesus gave his life for Judas but Judas wasn’t interested. He preferred his own sinful life of
greed and betrayal. I am sure Judas had many opportunities to repent and put his faith in Jesus,
but he never did. He rejected the grace of God that could empower him to say no to sin.
Jesus died for Judas, what more could he do? There is nothing. There is no more sacrifice for
sins other than the one Jesus provided. To reject Jesus as Lord is to trample the Son of God
underfoot and treat the blood of the covenant as unholy.
How do you insult the Spirit of grace?
If you gave me a brand-new car out of the generosity of your heart, but I insisted on paying for
it, you would be insulted. Similarly, we insult the Spirit of grace by trying to pay for what God
has freely given us. We may call it “proving our salvation” or “appropriating what God has
given” but it’s all unbelief. It is like saying, “I need to finish what Christ began.”
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ESCAPE TO REALITY – GREATEST HITS VOL. 4
The wrong way to read Hebrews is to think that God is judging us on our performance.
Over and over again Hebrews tells us that it is Jesus and
his
performance that matters. It is
his
sacrifice that made us holy and perfect forever (Hebrews 10:10,14).
How can we interpret Hebrews 10:26 as a warning against sin when Hebrews 9:26 says
Christ appeared once for all “to do away with sin by the sacrifice of himself”? Is it a finished
work or isn’t it?
If God chooses to remember our sins no more (see Hebrews 8:12, 10:17), what business is it
of ours to remind him? Doing so insults the Son of Grace who bore our sins and the Spirit of
Grace who remembers them no more.
The main warning of Hebrews is not in regard to sin but unbelief:
So we see that they were not able to enter, because of their unbelief. (Hebrews 3:19)
The Hebrews of Moses’ day never entered God’s rest because they hardened their hearts to his
voice. In the New Testament era, many Jews were doing the same thing. They had received the
knowledge of truth, they had heard the gospel of grace, but they rejected it.
The author of Hebrews writes to stir up faith. Without it we cannot please God. With it we
can come boldly to the throne of grace.
But we do not belong to those who shrink back and are destroyed, but to those who have
faith and are saved. (Hebrews 10:39)
Some people hear the good news of God’s grace and shrink back. They cannot believe it. “It’s
too good to be true,” they say. “I’d better save myself by doing works.”
Do you see the danger? You cannot save yourself. You cannot elevate yourself to co-savior
with Christ. This is why sermons that put the emphasis on you and your performance are so
dangerous.
Don’t buy into any message that purports to give you a list of keys or steps that will help
you achieve/accomplish/appropriate what you already have. It is impossible for the blood of
bulls and the sweat of men to take away sins and it is faithless to strive for what you already
have (which is every good thing in Christ Jesus).
According to Hebrews there are only two kinds of people; those who don’t enter because of
unbelief and those who believe and are saved. Sin is not the variable; faith is. Where does faith
come from? Jesus! He is the Author and Perfecter of our faith (Hebrews 12:2). Fix your eyes on
him.
21
GRACE REMIX
Apparently I didn’t do a very good job with this one because a reader said, “I don’t get it. Can
you explain this passage once more?” Here’s the short version: If we will not be satisfied and
rest in the finished work of the cross, then nothing can save us, for there is no other sacrifice for
sins. And here’s the shorter version: There’s no Plan B. It’s Jesus or nothing.
22
6. Don’t Listen to Job’s Friends
A few days ago a house on the Sunshine Coast in Australia was destroyed in a fire started by
faulty Christmas lights. A family of five were sleeping inside but only the father managed to
escape the flames. The neighbors found him in the driveway “burnt from head to toe” and
screaming in pain. There is some speculation that his wife might have been able to save herself
but she stayed with her children, two of whom were disabled.
As a father, my heart breaks for this man. When he wakes up in hospital he will learn the
awful news that he has lost his entire family.
I wish I could go to that man in the burn unit and say something to ease his pain, but I don’t
know what I would say. However, I know what I
wouldn’t
say:
Endure hardship as discipline; God is treating you as his children. For what children are not
disciplined by their father? (Hebrews 12:7)
If that seems out of left field, it’s because I have just read something that has my blood boiling.
There is steam coming out of my ears. Here’s a paraphrase: “You should view every hardship in
life as God’s loving discipline. God is sovereign and everything that happens to you, good or
bad, is for your good. Indeed, it is proof of his love for the Lord disciplines those he loves.”
Apparently this is meant to be comforting. Maybe you just lost your wife and kids in a
house-fire but be comforted for God did it. Why? Because he loves you.
And we wonder why the lost aren’t embracing us as bearers of the good news!
Some time ago I wrote that God was not responsible for Job’s loss no matter what Job 1:21 says.
I still get emails on a regular basis that say, “How dare you contradict the Bible? How dare you
say that God is not the author of evil?” How can I say it? Because Jesus said it:
The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy; I have come that they may have life, and
have it to the full. (John 10:10)
Isn’t it strange that most Christians would hesitate to tell the burned man that his family and
home were destroyed by the devil—“you can’t blame Satan for everything”—yet there are some
who are quick to point the finger at our loving Father? “God did it.” But why would God kill
little children in their sleep? “Who can say? God is mysterious.”
23
GRACE REMIX
Forgive me for ranting, but this is insane! It is exactly this sort of madness that makes the
church look like a home for whackos. This kind of thinking dishonors the Lord, and it keeps us
passive when we should be taking a stand and fighting back. Instead of resisting the devil so
that he flees, we submit to the devil and say, “The Lord is disciplining us. Oh we’re so loved!”
And this is why I am writing. There is a time for enduring hardship and there is a time for
resisting the devil and you need to know the difference.
As usual, Jesus shows the way. He did not consider sickness a hardship to be endured—he
resisted it. Neither did he consider demonic oppression a hardship to be endured—he resisted
it. At times he even resisted death by raising a little girl and a dead man. He spoke to storms
and said we would speak to mountains. Jesus did all these things to show us how the Father
responds to the devil’s work. And yes, I have no problem attributing sickness to the devil,
because the Bible does:
You know… how God anointed Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Spirit and power, and how
he went around doing good and healing all who were under the power of the devil, because
God was with him. (Act 10:37–38)
I said I didn’t know what I would say to the man in the burn unit, but Jesus would know. He
would reveal the “God of all comfort who comforts us in all of our troubles” (2 Corinthians 1:3–
4).
If I was in a position to visit that man I would trust the Holy Spirit to show me what to say
and do. Sadly, accidents are a fact of life and sometimes children die. I cannot imagine the pain
of that loss, but I believe there’s healing for everything. You want to talk about the mystery of
God? Then marvel at how he is able to bring good even out of the most awful of circumstances.
Arise shine!
The bad news of dead religion has reduced Christians to commentators on the sidelines of life.
If something good happens, we congratulate each other for sowing into kingdom principles. But
if something bad happens, we say the Lord did it because he loves us. This is a nauseating and
useless theology. Live this way and you will never display the manifold wisdom of God to
rulers and authorities in heavenly realms (Ephesians 3:10).
I don’t normally write in reaction to things like this but I had to vent. I’m heartbroken for
the man in the burn unit and I’m heartbroken over a church that gets its theology from Job’s
friends.
I began by paraphrasing some bad writing (“Hardship is proof that God loves you”). I’m
going to finish by paraphrasing something that’s pure gold. You can decide which you prefer.
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ESCAPE TO REALITY – GREATEST HITS VOL. 4
See Jesus! See the finished work of the cross! Your light has come and the glory of the Lord
rises upon you. You may have problems and hardships and yes thick darkness is over the
peoples. But the Lord rises upon you and his glory appears over you. Those mountains are
coming down! You may be a worm, little Jacob, but God himself will help you. He will
make you into a threshing sledge with many teeth. You will thresh the mountains and crush