I have the privilege of preaching occasionally at Forest Community Church in Forest, VA. About two years ago I began a series on Hebrews entitled "Keep Your Eyes on Jesus." I decided to post the links to the videos for any who would like to watch them. This sermon covers Hebrews 3:1-6 and is called "A Strategy for Discouragement." The sermon was originally preached on June 26, 2022. I'll post the notes/outline below (NOTE: the vide may not follow the notes exactly!), but here is the video link: Hebrews 3:1-6. The sermon starts around the 2:00 minute mark.
A
Remedy for Discouragement,
Hebrews 3:1-6 (Thanks to Alec Rowlands’ on-line Sermon "God's House" for some of the material here)
Introduction: Funny story of discouraged man (Alec Rowlands):
"I read a story the other day of an accident report, turned in to an insurance office, by an injured, discouraged bricklayer, that would be funny if it was not so close to reality for many of us here this morning. This is the material discouragement is made of:
Dear Sirs:
I am writing this letter in response to your request for additional information on my insurance claim form. In block #3 of the accident report form, entitled "Cause of the accident", I put, "trying to do the job alone." You said in your letter that I should explain more fully, and I trust that the following details will be sufficient.
I am a bricklayer by trade. On the date of the accident, I was working alone on the roof of the new six story building. When I completed my work, I discovered that I had about 500 pounds of bricks left over. Rather than carry the bricks by hand, I decided to lower them in a barrel by using a pulley which fortunately attached to the side of the building, at the sixth floor.
Securing the rope at ground level, I went up to the roof, swung the barrel out, and loaded the brick into it. Then I went back to the ground and untied the rope, holding it tightly to insure a slow descent of the 500 pounds of brick. You will note in block #11 of the accident report form that I weigh 135 pounds.
Due to my surprise of being jerked off the ground so suddenly, I lost my presence of mind and forgot to let go of the rope. Needless to say, I proceeded at a rather rapid rate up the side of the building.
In the vicinity of the third floor, I met the barrel coming down. This explains the fractured skull and broken collar bone.
Slowed only slightly, I continued my rapid ascent, not stopping until the fingers of my right hand were two knuckles deep into the pulley.
Fortunately I had regained my presence of mind and was able to hold tightly to the rope in spite of the pain.
At approximately the same time, however, the barrel of bricks hit the ground, and the bottom fell out of the barrel. Devoid of the weight of the bricks, the barrel now weighs approximately fifty pounds.
I refer you again to my weight in block #11. I began a rapid descent down the side of the building.
In the vicinity of the third floor, I met the barrel coming up. This accounts for the two fractured ankles and the lacerations of my legs and lower body.
The encounter with the barrel slowed me enough to lessen my injuries when I fell onto the pile of bricks and, fortunately, only three vertebrae were cracked.
I am sorry to report, however, that as I lay there on the bricks in pain, unable to stand, and watching the empty barrel six stories above me, I again lost my presence of mind....and...I....let go of the rope. The empty barrel weighed more than the rope so it came down on me and broke both legs. I hope this is the information you require!
A comparison is made to the discouraged Jews who received the sermon/letter to the Hebrews. Some of the recipients of this letter appear to be interested in walking away from Jesus to go to a belief system that may provide them security (but could not provide them the salvation afforded by Jesus).
How do we grow in our faith to the point where we can have a heart of gratitude in discouraging times? Hebrews 3:1-6 offers a remedy to discouragement. To combat
discouragement, we need a strategy, and the author of Hebrews provides us one
in 3:1-6. The strategy involves three things: 1) the plan: consider Jesus, 2) the builder: considered worthy and made ready, and
3) the house: hold fast to what God is building. Every architect starts with a plan in mind, so let’s consider the
plan first. Then we’ll look at our architect and the house he builds.
Point
1—The Plan: Consider Jesus—vv.
1-2: One sentence—The author calls us brothers and sisters who share (“share”
here is similar to the word used to describe Jesus “partaking” of humanity) a
heavenly calling, a calling to an inheritance stored up for us in heaven and
eternal life in the presence of God. It is an upward call. In Philippians 3:14,
Paul says, "I press on toward the goal to win the prize for which God has
called me heavenward in Christ Jesus." Of course, pulling us down every
day are the weights and bondages and discouragements of this world. Verse
1—"holy brothers"—those who have been sanctified by Jesus’ blood (1:3; 2:11). They
also “share in the heavenly calling”—living in a heavenly orientation. That
orientation is a focus on heavenly things.
Consider
Jesus (Alec Rowlands): “First, there is ‘The Plan’. The book of Hebrews is written to a group
of believers who are discouraged and considering quitting it all. . . . who wouldn't be discouraged? . . . . They are hurting. So the Holy Spirit, writing in 3:1, gives us God's
plan for us.”
Apply your
mind to Jesus—Consider him—study him—savor him. To consider something requires
time and effort. It doesn’t happen automatically, especially when we’re busy. And so our antidote to drifting and our strength for endurance is to
see and savor Messiah Jesus from His Word. Since we are prone to drift, we must
take time to consider Jesus often!
What does
our author say about Jesus? He is the Apostle and high priest of our
confession. Confession is a public statement and a public living. Public
confession is the response of faith to the action of God in Jesus Christ. The
core of that confession is Jesus as the Son of God. What do we confess? Jesus
is God’s Apostle and God’s Appointed High priest (sums up material in chapters
1 and 2). Jesus is sent by God to proclaim the definitive word of salvation and
to make atonement for our sins. Jesus is only called “Apostle” and “High
Priest” in Hebrews. In later chapters, the author of Hebrews will unpack the
idea of Jesus as High Priest. Suffice it to say that here we are to confess and
to consider Jesus as the one sent by God to settle once for all (definitively)
the plan God has for humanity. Jesus is our high priest who has gone through
everything that is causing us pain--only He does more than sympathize,
this priest has the power to deliver us and to set us free, to give us His joy
in the middle of difficulty (and to make us into the people God called us to
be). It is a heavenly focus and a call to faithfulness. 2 Kings 6: the enraged
king of Aram sent horses and chariots to capture Elisha because God was using
him to thwart the king’s plans to destroy Israel. The servant saw the enemy
until Elisha asked God to open his eyes to see God’s army.
A heavenly
focus! Where is our focus? Consider Jesus. Why? Because Jesus was and is faithful, and
his faithfulness invites us to faithful life. It also a comparison to Moses
since Moses was also faithful. Jesus was faithful to his appointed tasks just
as Moses. Both men were faithful. In the next section, however, our author will
show a difference between the faithfulness of Jesus and the faithfulness of
Moses. Here, our author reminds us that to combat discouragement we need to
consider Jesus!
If our
strategy for discouragement involves a focus on Jesus, then we need to consider
why Jesus is worthy of that consideration/focus. Verses 3-4 explain why Jesus
is worthy of our consideration—he is our builder, the one who builds God’s
house into a holy people. He is superior to prophets, angels, and even Moses.
Let’s see.
Point 2—The Builder: Considered Worthy (and Made Ready)—vv. 3-4: These verses lay out what we find as we fix our thoughts on Jesus. He is the faithful builder of our lives. Jesus has given us the plans, and He is the builder. The author of Hebrews compares Jesus' faithfulness in our lives to the faithfulness of Moses as a leader of God's people. The main point here is that although Moses was a great leader, he was only a servant in God’s house. Jesus is the builder.
The
argument turns on the difference between a servant (therapon—attendant,
waiter, comrade in arms) and a son (huios—son, maybe “heir”?) mentioned
in verses 5-6.
There is a
difference between service in the house of God and the opportunity to preside
over the house of God. The key to the argument here is Jesus’ faithfulness. The
basis of Jesus’ superiority is his relationship as Son—as Son he is sort of
“appointed” by his Father to preside over the house. Moses is reliable because
he is faithful—he “witnessed” to the things God “spoke” (a reference to Heb.
1:1?). Moses testified of “future” things. Moses testified about Jesus. In the
ministry of Jesus we may recognize the fulfillment of the ancient promises concerning
a faithful agent of God.
Considered
worthy—Jesus is considered worthy of more honor than Moses just like a builder
is worthy of more honor than the home built. Have or possess—the builder has or
possesses more honor that what he builds. Make ready/build—every house is made
ready/built by someone, but God built everything (through Jesus? Cf. Heb 1).
God is the
one who builds everything, and in chapter 1 we are told that God built
everything through his Son Jesus. Jesus is the architect (like a “carpenter” tekton)
who builds and rules over God’s house. Moses is a butler/servant in God’s
house, but Jesus is the Son and the builder.
Jesus is a faithful builder. He will not forsake you. He will never forget you. He
will not give up on you. He has proven himself to be faithful, and Jesus will be
faithful even now.
Our
strategy to combat discouragement requires a focus on Jesus who is worthy of
our attention due to his faithfulness. But there is one final thing to
consider: the house that our builder is building. If the builder is faithful, then
the house he builds will be faithful as well. However, we must hold fast to our
confidence and hope. So, what is the house God is building through Jesus?
Point
3—The House: Hold Fast to What God is Building—vv. 5-6: Christ as Son over
God’s house (“Christ” is used for the first time here) marks the contrast
between Moses and Jesus. The servant (Moses) serves in the house. The son
presides over the house. The Greek word for “servant” is used only here in the
New Testament. It comes from the Septuagint of Numbers 12:7, and has the nuance
of one who serves voluntarily (G. Abbott-Smith, A Manual Greek Lexicon of the
New Testament [Charles Scribner’s Sons], p. 108). The contrast is, although
Moses was great, he was only a servant, whereas Jesus is the Son of God, the
heir of all things
We are his
household . . . Jesus is faithful to God. We demonstrate that we are his people
if we also show ourselves to be faithful. Faithfulness begets faithfulness as “faith begets
faith” (Romans 1:16-17). The implied question here is: Will you be faithful?
Consider
also what Jesus has made us. He is our builder. Jesus has made us his house. “House”
is used seven times in this passage. It is a metaphor for God’s people, in whom
He dwells (Eph. 2:19, 22; 1 Tim. 3:15; 1 Pet. 2:4-5). The Bible never calls a
church building “God’s house.” God’s people are His house.
Rounding
out his exhortation in verse 6, the author of Hebrew offers a conditional
sentence. If we hold fast our confidence and the hope of which we boast. The
word katecho (“hold on”) conveys the meaning of hold to, keep,
detain/restrain, contain/check, occupy, or possess. The idea is to keep a tight
grip on our Christian faith (cf. “fixing our attention on Jesus in 6:1). Nowhere
in the New Testament more than Hebrews do we find such repeated insistence on
the fact that continuance in the Christian life is the test of reality.
There are two commandments in our passage. The first one is "Consider Jesus." The second one is "Cling to the hope and the confidence in which you boast." Clinging means I have to make it my responsibility to cling to Jesus. It must be my first course of action.
“Courage”
or “confidence” speaks of public boldness (the opposite of shrinking back or
hiding). “Hope” refers to the relationship we have with God through Christ—it
has both a present and future aspect. “Boast” has to do with the idea of what
one “glories in” rather than selfish boasting.
In John 8:31, Jesus put it this way, "If you hold to My teaching, you are really My disciples." Those who are faithful to Jesus, they are God's house. He took up residence in them when they were born again. Peter says that you are "living stones, being built into a spiritual house." The writer of Hebrews says, "We are his house!" Then he adds these words--we are God's house . . . if we hold onto our courage . . . if we hold onto the hope of which we boast. Those who are faithful to hold on are the house of God. Today, in the middle of discouragement, now is not the time for giving up, rather it's time for holding on.
The
strategy to fight discouragement includes the Plan, the Builder, and the House.
How should we respond?
Conclusion—First, read Scripture. Read the following chapters: 2
Kings 6, Psalm 30, Isaiah 66, Galatians 6, and Luke 10. Ask yourself three questions: 1) What is God doing here? 2) How does Jesus fit in these passages? 3) What can we learn that will help us to consider and to cling to Jesus?
Second, take some time to savor Jesus. Set aside about 10 minutes a day to think about the beauty and amazing grace of Jesus. Write down some of the things you know about him. Thank him for his character, for his grace, for his kindness, for his holiness, for his sacrifice, for his faithfulness. Spend time to consider Jesus.
Consider Jesus, cling to Jesus.
On Christ the solid rock I stand, all other ground is sinking sand . . .
Consider Jesus, cling to Jesus.
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