The book of Hebrews is a brilliant epistle. The author
points us to Jesus and then expounds the superiority and exclusivity of Christ
as the only way of salvation. If you read the book of Hebrews in one sitting,
you can see the flow and get the overarching theme: Christ is superior, Jesus
is the way. But, if you slow down, and examine word by word and line by line,
you see the depth of theology and meaning in the text. Notice one small section
of the books first sentence: “when [Jesus] had by himself purged our sins, sad
down on the right hand of the Majesty on high” (Hebrews 1:3b).
Jesus purged our sins. Jesus cleansed us from our guilt and
transgression against God's law. Christ Jesus took our sins, bore them and
removed them from us as far as the east is from the west. Jesus, by himself,
purged our sins. The Old Testament tells the story of thousands of priests and
thousands of years of sacrifice and offerings; yet the sum total of all those
offerings could not, once and for all,
deal with sin. There were many priests who had daily priestly tasks. Yet Jesus,
by himself, dealt with sin, once and for all.
Jesus purged the sins by himself, without your help. The
priests could not do the job alone. It was not physically possible for one man
to do everything that needed to be done in the service. One man could not
provide all the animals and offerings, and then offer all the sacrifices, be
the judge of controversies, keep the cities of refuge, judge case of leprosy,
pray and bless the nation and provide the spiritual needs of the people, just
to mention a few. Jesus, by himself saved us, without your assistance. He did
not need your opinion or your help. He doesn’t need you to offer your good
works along with His. Jesus fully and completely and perfectly saves. There is
no other way of salvation. Jesus is the only way.
Jesus sat down at the right hand of the Father. When a
priest walked into the temple, he would pass the altar, the table that held the
shewbread. The smell the incense wafted from the altar and the lights flickered
from the lamp-stand. He would gaze upon the veil that separated him from the
Holy of Holies, and once a year, would enter and behold the ark of the
covenant. But what he did not see was a chair. There was not a seat to rest or
a throne to sit upon. The job of the priest was never done. But Christ, after
he purged our sins, rose from the dead and ascended on high. And he sat. He sat
down because the job was finished. He sat down because the victory was won. He
sat down at the right hand of the Father because the wrath of God was satisfied,
sin was paid for, and the work of redemption was accomplished.
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