This Sunday, we plan to wrap up the book of Hebrews (Hebrews 13:22-25) and what we find in these verses, among other things, are compelling reasons that we should listen to the message of the book. Hebrews doesn’t happen in a vacuum. There were real circumstances and cares that led the author to write. As these emerge, we find hope for how we can listen more effectively. It’s really a great way to end the book, thinking about why the message it contains is so important.
Weekend Preview – Prayer
This coming Lord’s Day, we plan on looking on Hebrews 13:18-19 and it’s call for people to pray. There are some specific ways this author contributes to our thinking on prayer that will, undoubtedly, be a great encouragement to us. We all know the importance of prayer. This, coupled with the amazing truths we’ve seen time and time again in the book of Hebrews about how we’re made acceptable in God’s sight, what our great High Priest has done to give us confidence to enter, and how Christ Himself is interceding make this a very exciting text to pursue this weekend.
I hope you’ll come and be encouraged to be a person of prayer.
Weekend Prep (2) – Godly Leaders
Following up on yesterday’s post, having seen what kind of godly men leaders are to be, we see that there is, indeed, an appropriate response to godly leaders. Hebrews 13:17 gives us this:
Obey your leaders and submit to them, for they are keeping watch over your souls, as those who will have to give an account. Let them do this with joy and not with groaning,for that would be of no advantage to you.
Now, we may not like what the Bible has to say to us about our response to godly leadership, but we are called to such a thing nonetheless. We aren’t to follow our leaders into sin or encourage them in paths that are dishonoring to God; however, following them is all about God being in charge and having authority over our lives. If we esteem Him, then we will respond to the leaders He’s given the local church appropriately. This weekend, we’ll be exploring this text. I hope you come with a humble, teachable heart to love God supremely, especially in your local church.
Weekend Prep (1) – Godly Leaders…
This coming Lord’s Day, we will be looking at Hebrews 13:17 and its call for people in the church to relate to their leaders. Too many pastors in evangelicalism use this verse to beat up people. I heard one pastor say that this verse means that the church is to obey her leaders “no ifs, ands or buts.” The only problem is that this verse comes with a context and language. For instance, in highlighting the work of these leaders as “oversight of souls”, the readers of Hebrews are mindful that this is an entire congregation job, as well (Hebrews 3:12-13, Hebrews 12:15) So, leaders aren’t to be obeyed or given a free pass on sin, having a hard heart, being proud, arrogant, or teaching false doctrine. But, they are to lead so persuasively with their lives and teaching that people would want to put their trust and confidence in them.
Along these lines, then, I am LOVING Tom Schreiner’s message at a recent SBTS chapel. It’s entitled, Shepherding God’s Flock from Acts 20:17-38. Around the 15:15 mark, here’s what he said:
“Pastors and teachers, I’m speaking to myself here too, we can become deeply unspiritual and selfish even while preaching on the importance of being godly. We must remember that everything that happens in the church and in the ministry is for our sanctification as well, as pastors, it’s for our holiness. I think there’s an amazing tool of the devil here: We can teach people how God uses trials to sanctify them and to make them holy and we can forget, amazingly, that the trials we’re receiving in our own church are meant for our holiness and our sanctification. Instead, we can begin to view the difficult people in our churches–and they’re there–we can begin to view them as opponents instead of loving them, instead of recognizing that God’s using them to make us more like Jesus…we may forget that we are sinners who need forgiveness everyday and we may inadvertently hold our people to a standard that we don’t match ourselves. We can become bitter about our flock, instead of loving them. We can get together and criticize our sheep, instead of caring for them. So, we need the grace of God everyday, don’t we? We need the Holy Spirit to love our flock the way God wants us to do so. We need to be quick to confess our own sins and our own shortcomings as pastors. We too stand in need of the wonderful grace of God.”
This is the kind of leader that is to be obeyed and submitted to in Hebrews 13:17. More to come on that response tomorrow…
Worship, Praise & Sacrifices
These words evoke images that are striking for some and not so striking for others. Worship and praise, those are good buzz words in church culture. Sacrifice, well, as long as it’s convenient. Tomorrow, as we gather for worship, we will be exploring Hebrews 13:15-16 and the sacrifices that God delights in. Specifically, we will see that a sacrifice of praise is pleasing to God and comes out of lives changed by the Gospel of Christ. Come and be challenged to live lives of worship that please this God.
Weekend Preview – Go, Outside, Future
This coming Lord’s Day, we will be back in Hebrews with an especially excellent text. Hear God’s Word:
Therefore, let us go to Him outside the camp and bear the reproach he endured. For here we have no lasting city, but we seek the city that is to come. (Hebrews 13:13-14)
God’s Word is so helpful to fuel application out of deep theological truth. Because of Hebrews 13:7-12 and in light of the eternal message they had been given specifically pointed to Jesus’ once-for-all work of atonement for us to make us holy, we are urged to live our lives very specifically in this world. As we think about this on Sunday, ask God to open up our hearts to identify with Christ.
Have a blessed weekend and I look forward to seeing you on Sunday.
Weekend Preview – Committed To the Gospel
This Sunday, Lord willing, I hope to dive into Hebrews 13:7-12. We keep making our way closer and closer to the end of this great book. And, this book is ending in an amazing way.
In Hebrews 13:1-3, we’ve seen that our love is to be towards other believers, towards strangers and towards the needy.
In Hebrews 13:4, we were reminded that God does care about what marriage is and desires to be honored in it.
In Hebrews 13:5-6, we saw that God is enough. We should keep ourselves free from coveting and the allurements for “more” and find rest in God, who will never leave us or forsake us. The content soul in God is able to confess from a heart of faith: The Lord is my Helper, I don’t have to be paralyzed by fear, and there’s nothing the world will throw at me that will change this.
In Hebrews 13:7-12, we are drawn back to the Gospel, that established these Hebrew Christians (13:7), is a message about an unchanging eternal Savior (13:8), is consistently challenged (13:9), is based on a singular access to God (13:10) and has the effect of changing all of those who believe its truth (13:11-12). This message calls for our commitment. I hope you’ll be with us in worship to dive deep into these truths.
Stop Being Such A Greedy Pig
We must guard ourselves against all selfishness, greed and coveting. As Charles Spurgeon said:
It is not possible to satisfy the greedy. If God gave them one who world to themselves they would cry for another; and if it were possible for them to possess heaven as they now are, they would feel themselves in hell, because others were in heaven too, for their greed is such that they must have everything or else they have nothing.
This Sunday, we will look at Hebrews 13:5-6 and its call to contentment. Search your heart? Are you greedy, loving money and “more”? Come Sunday and hear how God is more than enough for anything you need.
Corporate Prayer at Crestview
I love that our church regularly disciplines our time for corporate prayer. This Sunday (9/30) at 6PM, we will take time to gather together and pray. Recently, Sinclair Ferguson commented on the importance of corporate prayer in a post entitled Does Your Church Pray Together. He said:
There is the lack of prayer and of the Church praying. This is to me the most alarming, for this reason: we have built apparently strong, large, successful, active churches. But many of our churches never meet as a congregation for prayer. I mean never! What does that indicate we are saying about the life of the Church as a fellowship?
By contrast, the mark of a truly apostolic spirit in the church is that that we give ourselves to prayer and the Word together (Acts 6:4). No wonder “the Word of God continued to increase and the number of the disciples multiplied” (Acts 6:7). If this is so, it should not surprise us that while many churches see growth, it is often simply reconfiguration of numbers, not of conversion. I greatly wish that our churches would learn to keep the main things central, that we would learn to be true Churches, vibrant fellowships of prayer, Gospel ministry and teaching, genuine mutual love. At the end of the day, such a Church simply needs to “be” for visitors who come to sense that this is a new order of reality altogether and are drawn to Christ.
Will you join us? Let’s gather and see if God doesn’t do amazing things through these prayers.
Weekend Preview – Love, Love, Love
This coming Lord’s Day, we will be looking at Hebrews 13:1-3 and it’s call upon our lives to a 3 dimensional kind of love. One of the rubs in our day and age (especially in the church) is that we talk a good game of love. For instance, we can probably communicate how hard we are sacrificing in this or that area. But, if we’re honest a lot of that is hot air. We’re not that inconvenienced. We have time for others if we make time for others.
The author of Hebrews just lays it out there, though. We must be a loving people if we are going to live before a God who is a consuming fire (Hebrews 12:29). This weekend, then, ask God to prepare your heart to receive God’s Word that we may emerge a people characterized by love in striking ways.
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