Hebrews: Korah’s Revolt

How could there be a priesthood more perfect than that of Aaron, particularly when God had so protected the sanctity and exclusivity of the Aaronic priesthood for thousands of years?

Hebrews: A Better Priesthood

Melchizedek is a fascinating and mysterious figure in the Bible. Here is the sum total of his appearances in the pages of scripture.

Hebrews: Anchor of the Soul

The writer had given nearly three chapters of exhortation, dire warnings in stern language. Now he turned to encouragement, feeling certain his audience would respond to Godโ€™s call through his letter.

Hebrews: Scorched Earth

It is hard to know what exactly was meant by this extreme measure, but it seems this was real, and was intended for ultimate good.

Hebrews: Three Great Needs

The flow of Hebrews, then, so far, is to begin with Jesus and our right response, then to examine our need. Having pointed to Jesus as both fully God and also fully human, as uniquely able to pull off a God-sized rescue of all creation and also meet you and me right where we are, the writer would now address three great needs he saw among his readers, the Jewish believers.

Hebrews: Mathein and Pathein

Greek writers often paired the words mathein (to learn) and pathein (to suffer) together, because not only did they sound alike, it was accepted in antiquity that learning came through suffering.

Hebrews: Failure to Thrive

The Hebrew Christians were not growing. Filled with feelings of doubt, tempted to go back to their old familiar ways instead of forward in faith, they were failing to thrive.

Hebrews: The Arduous Road to Maturity

Healing means saying yes to God, trusting God, taking that next step with God, knowing it will be hard, but it will also be good.

Hebrews: Living and Active

as I look at the pages of my Bible, reading the English words there, inert, typed on paper, I wonder, โ€œHow is this living and active?โ€

Hebrews: How Not To Miss Out!

It is a better reading of the writerโ€™s exhortation to see โ€œGodโ€™s restโ€ as the process of sanctification in this life, a process that grants every believer peace from God that โ€œpasses understanding,โ€ confidence in God, and a willingness to fully surrender to Godโ€™s will, guidance, empowerment, and word.