Hebrews Lesson 114
NKJ Isaiah 40:31 But those who wait on the LORD Shall
renew their strength; They shall mount up with wings like eagles, They
shall run and not be weary, They shall walk and not faint.
As Jack noted, it has been since
January 3rd since we had
Bible class on Hebrews. I want you all
to tell me – what was the last thing I said?
“Amen.”
Somebody took a nap this
afternoon. You’re almost as much of a
smart aleck as Norm Geisler. Some of you
may not know who Norm Geisler is. Dr.
Geisler is probably one of the foremost apologists today. He has got multiple degrees, multiple
doctorates. He has written dozens and
dozens of books. He is a writing machine. One of the interesting things is to get to
know Dr. Geisler personally because he grew up in a home where learning was not
prized; learning was not emphasized. He
did not know how to read until he was a senior in high school. Now he has a couple of doctorates. Of course he writes and writes and writes and
writes. It was not discovered that he
couldn’t read until he was in an English class and they were given an
assignment. They were to read The
Tale of Two Cities.
So the teacher thinking that
there was something amiss with this young Norman Geisler said, “Well,
He looks at the teacher and said,
“With a period.”
So while he was down at the principal’s
office, they decided that he needed to have some remedial courses and learn how
to read.
So y’all are just as quick
and smart-alecky in saying, “Well, you ended with amen.”
I ended by saying, “It’s gonna be a month before we are back here again. So when we come back we’re probably going to
have to review everything so we can get back where we were.”
So, we won’t review
everything in as much detail, but we will hit the highpoints and begin to move
on.
Our passage is in Hebrews
8. You don’t need to turn there. We’re not going to be there long other than
the first two or three slides to orient us.
In verses 6 through 8 we are introduced to the major passage in the New
Testament on the New Covenant. The
writer of Hebrews says:
NKJ Hebrews 8:6 But now He
That is Jesus Christ through His ascension and session
at the right hand of the Father.
has obtained a more excellent
ministry,
That is “more excellent” in comparison to the high
priestly ministry of the Aaronic High Priest in the Old Testament.
inasmuch as He is also Mediator of a
better covenant, which was established on better promises.
So it connects His high
priestly ministry to the New Covenant in contrast to the Aaronic high priesthood
in the Old Testament and its connection to the Mosaic Covenant. Now in His high priestly ministry today,
Jesus Christ functions as our High Priest and He is seated at the right hand of
the Father; and we have all these passages we have seen from Hebrews 4 through
5 and into 7 dealing with His intercessory ministry as a major aspect of His
priesthood, His high priesthood for the church.
That is connected to this New Covenant.
So that’s one way in which the church participates in the blessing of
the New Covenant; and it is by virtue of our relationship to Jesus Christ. I pointed out last time that there are within
what is known as dispensationalism…there are four views on how the church
relates to the New Covenant – four different understandings. The fourth is the view of progressive
dispensationalists. They are neither
progressive nor dispensational in my opinion, but we will be a little gracious
and at least give a measure of credence to their pious fraud.
So in Hebrews 8:6 Jesus has a
more excellent ministry in His priesthood because it is connected to a superior
covenant which is enacted on better promises.
So, priesthood, covenant, and promises are all linked together in that
verse.
NKJ Hebrews 8:7 For if that first covenant
Notice, that’s in italics in
your Bible.
had been
faultless, then no place would have been sought for a second.
His argument has been that
the Mosaic Covenant was been unable to do what needed to be done in terms of
salvation. It had a limited priesthood,
limited application for salvation. So his
argument is that if that first covenant had been faultless and it wasn’t, there
would have been no occasion sought for a second. This is really his whole argument. He is
going to quote these next 6 or 7 verses only to establish the fact that because
it is called a New Covenant in verse 8, that necessarily implies that the older
covenant had to be replaced and was always understood to be temporary and not
permanent. So in verse 8 he says:
NKJ Hebrews 8:8 Because finding fault with them,
That is with the older covenant.
He says: "Behold, the days are
coming, says the LORD, when I will make a new covenant with the house of
That is the opening of
Jeremiah 31:31-34, four verses that are quoted directly into Hebrews 8. That’s another issue we will get to later
on. The point that he is making simply draws
on the fact that it is called the New Covenant.
He’s not getting into any of the details. That’s important I think because it helps us understand
how Peter is applying another New Covenant passage, Joel 2 to the coming of the
Holy Spirit in Acts 2.
Most of you were here last week,
the week before when
NKJ Micah 5:2 " But you, Bethlehem Ephrathah,
Though you are little among the thousands of Judah, Yet out of
you shall come forth to Me The One to be Ruler in Israel, Whose goings forth are
from of old, From everlasting."
Jesus would be born in
Or they took a literal
historical event out of
The third view was the view
called literal historical event. There
may be one point of similarity that is connected to an event. In Matthew 2 there is a quote from Jeremiah
dealing with the women, the mothers of
Now this may seem a little abstruse
and like a minor point for some of you. I’ll
connect these dots, but it is very important to understand how the writers of
the New Testament use the Old Testament.
When you get a passage such as the passage related to Jesus in Hosea 11:1:
NKJ Hosea 11:1 "When
When you exegete it in
context (I think that’s Hosea 11:1) you would never ever think from the context
of Hosea 11 that it applies it to the Messiah.
But, Matthew comes along and applies it (And that is the correct word to
use.) typologically to the Messiah.
There was a term that was used by the rabbis for this type of
interpretation. I don’t remember what it
is off the top of my head right now, but that’s in contrast to another form of
interpretation that was used in the first century called pesher interpretation.
And, pesher is spelled p-e-s-h-e-r. If you
want a fairly succinct understanding of what pesher interpretation is just
google it. Look it up on wikipedia and
the article in wikipedia is pretty accurate.
In pesher interpretation, this became popular in the intertestamental
period in rabbinical literature. They allegorized or spiritualized prophecy. Now there is a difference between applying a
passage typologically to an event and spiritualizing or allegorizing it. One of the differences is that applying it typologically
you’re not denying the original historical, grammatical, exegetical meaning of
the passage.
But in spiritual or
allegorizing you say, “Well that’s the literal, historical, grammatical meaning
is not important spiritually. What’s
important is the spiritualized or allegorized sense.”
It may have nothing whatsoever
to do with the literal historical grammatical sense of the passage. I guess the best term is rabbinical
imagination.
Now the reason I have gone
through this little detour for you is because I recently learned from a very
good source (an excellent source by the way) that in the New Testament
department at
I have been accused of bashing
In our history of doctrine
class on Monday night we are going to see how we really do fit and in much of what
we believe fits within a historical flow that goes all the way back to the
times when these various areas of theology were first crystallized and articulated. So we’re not some sort of aberration or
something that just sort of invented popped up on the scene maybe 100 years ago
or 150 years ago, but it is the natural progression of understanding of
doctrine from the second century all the way up to the present. Yet what happens and has happened when I
studied under Dr. Hannah when I was ThM and later doctoral studies. He used to say the life of a seminary
historically (He had spent a lot of time studying the history not only
Within the Christian
tradition, it obviously limited ways in
which people could express their rebellion against authority. One of the ways
they did it was to within the framework of so called scholarship overthrow the teaching
of the fathers of their tradition which is what has happened today in not only schools
like Dallas; but it’s happened at Talbot which was really a sister school to
Dallas and most of the faculty that taught at Talbot out in southern California
graduate school for Viola which is the Bible Institute of Los Angeles. That was an acronym. Also you had Western Conservative Baptist Theological
Seminary up in
Yet today if you have a
faculty member that is under the age of 45, they are not teaching in the
classroom the fundamental truths that were taught forty years ago. That is going to create an enormous vacuum. Training for pastors is going to come either
because you have well-grounded pastors with a vision in the pulpit who are
training and mentoring young men who will take a class here a class there sort
of a melting pot experience to get their basic skills together because there is
not one school to go to or you will have a new school develop that will embody
these principles for the next 60 or 70 years until they go the way of all
flesh. That’s where we are today.
It all boils down to interpretation. It’s interpretation, interpretation, interpretation. That’s the battlefield. We see it not only at the doctrinal
theological Bible study level, but you see it at the national level. How do we interpret the Constitution? How do we interpret law? How do we interpret the history of the
nation? How do we interpret the vision
of the Founding Fathers? Once you cut
yourself lose from any form of absolute where you have strict guidelines on how
you understand things. In a literal
grammatical historical interpretation you still have disagreements, but they
are not at the level you do once you sort of slip your anchor to the meaning of
words and their historical grammatical context in allegorical or spiritualized
interpretation because anybody can come up with their own view of what they
think these words mean.
So the boundaries start
breaking down. The same thing happens
when you interpret law. Nobody
understands law in terms of absolute objective sense anymore. We don’t live in a nation or in a world that
believes in objective knowledge of anything anymore. It’s just your opinion. What’s even worse is how you feel about it. Who do you feel about that? Who do you feel like voting for? It’s all grounded in subjectivism and emotion
and experience and nobody wants to think through the issues any more.
If you listen to most all of
the candidates running for office today, you need to be asking yourself, “What
specifics are you telling me when you want change? What do you want to change? What do you want to keep? Why do you want to change it? What policies are you going to change here or
change there? How are you going to
improve the economy? Let’s have some
specific proposals. How are you going to
improve the situation in
But, you don’t hear
that. You hear these wonderful sounding
statements that have emotional overtones to them and everybody goes home and
says, “Didn’t he say wonderful things?”
He didn’t say anything. She didn’t say anything. I want to be equal. Now you know who I am talking about. Nobody said anything. Nobody has said anything. You get very little content. So nobody knows what they are voting
for. They’re just voting for an
image.
That’s what has happened in
our culture. It was really boosted by
film and then television in the 20th century. As Marshal McClune observed,
the medium is the message. The medium
really communicated a lot of things so a lot of people became more concerned
about how things appeared than reality. That’s
exactly where we are in an existential world where we don’t know how to get in
touch with reality. All we have is
appearances and feeling. Since we have
this little thing running around in our genetic system called the sin nature
that is oriented to suppressing the truth in unrighteousness, and when you
reject truth all you are left with is lies.
You’re left with fantasy. You’re
left with fiction. That’s what people
construct is – their own fictionalized, fantasized account of reality. Somehow they can make life feel good, feel
comfortable, feel good about things. No
matter what happens, within 24 hours we’re going to spin it in our heads so
that it really isn’t that bad and it isn’t going to happen to us. It would just happen to somebody else. We build these castles in the air. Then we move in. That’s
called psychosis. We are a nation of
psychotics living in dream castles constructed out of thin air. Then some politician comes along or some theologian
comes or some pastor comes along and makes us feel all warm and fuzzy. Everybody quits thinking because that
supports everybody’s little fantasy castle.
Somebody sent around today a
link to a 60 minutes show that I think appeared a month or 6 weeks ago having
to do with a rather large church in
In the blog following it where
people could listen to the video segments and comment on it, one of the most
enlightening came from a Moslem woman who said, “Isn’t it wonderful to listen
to this pastor because what he says isn’t offensive to Jews or Christians or
Muslims. We can all come together and listen
to what he says and nobody is offended. That’s
really what we need – is love.”
Anybody want a coke? All we need is love……yeah.
Anyhow it is important to get
down to these nitty-gritty issues on interpretation. A lot of people don’t want to do that in
churches.
“Just tell me what it means.”
In fact I was talking to a
pastor the other day and he has got 3 or 4 people in his church that give him a
hard time every time he mentions anything about grammar or anything else. But see, you have to understand something
about the details of these different views, these different positions, where
they come from, why they’re important, how the interpretation of this passage
is going to affect your interpretation of Acts 2 and Acts 2 and Acts 3 fit
together in terms of a
This is why I say they are
not progressive or dispensational claiming that on the basis of their hermeneutic,
their interpretation that Jesus is now sitting on David’s throne in
heaven. It’s not a literal throne on the
earth. It’s a heavenly throne. That is going to change. It dominoes.
Theology is like anything
else. If the thinking of God is all
integrated and it’s all internally consistent, it’s up to us to try to
understand Him and what He has revealed.
When we start spinning the dials and changing the relationship of
different things to one another, it changes other things. It has all kinds of ripple effects through
your thought system - how you understand the spiritual life, how you understand
the future, how you understand grace.
These things all start to domino.
What I am trying to do is at
least give you enough information so you know one that maybe what I’m saying isn’t
something that is just based on an opinion or a knee-jerked reaction or some
sort of theological prejudice that I have on the one hand. And on the other hand, it is enough tools so that you when you read the Scripture and
when you hear what other people say …and you never know when you’re going to be
someplace, somewhere and you’re going to hear somebody say something and it may
even sound good at first; but then you think about it and some of this stuff
will come back to you as you think it through and avoid being led astray. That’s part of the job of every pastor – is
to teach people to think so that they are not lead astray so that they are not deceived
by the false teachers, the wolves that Paul warned the Ephesian pastors about
that there would be wolves in sheep’s clothing that would come in amongst the
flock trying to destroy them. So the pastor can’t be everywhere. So a pastor has to teach these kinds of
things.
There are some really interesting
interconnections in all of this some of which I am just beginning to - each
time I go through something like this I don’t know who learns more you or
me. But I always learn more about what
it is I believe and what I’m teaching. You
just get the overflow from that.
So this passage is a direct quote
from the Jeremiah 31 passage. He only
quotes it for one reason - to emphasize this word “new”. Because it is called the New Covenant, it
means the old was temporary. And he
quotes four verses to do that. That’s
the same methodology Peter has in Acts 2.
He quotes that whole Joel 2 section, 6 or 7 verses, only to emphasize
the point that there is just a similarity between what the Holy Spirit did on
the day of Pentecost and what the Holy Spirit is going to do on the Day of the
Lord. So it’s an application. But there’s only one small point of
contact. Everything that happens…nothing
that is mentioned in Joel 2 happens in Acts 2.
Nothing that happened on the Day of Pentecost is mentioned in Joel
2. So why does Peter say this is
that? Because, he is making a point of
application. But he’s also talking about
what happens on the Day of the Lord which is a technical term for the final
intense judgments at the end of the Tribulation immediately preceding and
accompanying the return of Jesus Christ to the earth to defeat the enemies of
So that’s my little rant
today about why all of this is important.
You have to get into the details because details are really important. It is amazing today. Lazy minds don’t want to know details.
“Just give me my fast food at
the drive through window and I’ll take it home and eat it…but don’t make me sit
here and learn how to cook or how to go to the grocery store and how to shop or
how to make a rue. I will just go buy it
somewhere.”
Okay. The backdrop to all this are the 8 biblical
covenants. You have the gentile
covenants that are all basically forms of the same covenant, but there has to
be modifications because of sin. The
original creation covenant replaced after the fall with the Adamic Covenant which
is replaced after the flood with the Noahic Covenant which is still in
effect.
Three reasons you’re glad the
Noahic Covenant is still in effect.
That’s what you are reminded
of all three when you see a rainbow.
Then you have your Jewish
covenants. The Abrahamic Covenant is the
foundation covenant. The three elements
are land, seed, and blessing. That lays
the backdrop for understanding the rest of history. There is a Land Covenant with
Then you have the Davidic
Covenant which speaks of ultimate ruler.
They can’t rule themselves. No
man can because of sin. So God is going
to give them the right kind of ruler who is a righteous ruler. Then because a righteous ruler has a hard
time dealing with unrighteous people, God is going to bring into effect the New
Covenant which is going to give the people a new heart. So then both the ruler and the people will be
righteous and there will be a righteous kingdom. So God is the one who is going to ultimately
going to have to do all the work because fallen man can’t. So the Abrahamic Covenant focuses on the Land
Covenant, the Davidic covenant. And the
New Covenant and then the Davidic Covenant promise an eternal house, and
eternal kingdom and an eternal house. This
is the basis for Jesus Christ being the Son of David, why He is the Son of
David that He will establish a kingdom.
He will rule on the throne of David.
It’s a literal earthly throne just as David’s throne was.
Now how and when do all these
come into final effect? The covenants
are all made early but, they don’t come into effect; they aren’t established
until the Second Coming of Christ. So we
have our timeline here. The promises are made in the Old Testament. God makes these promises to individuals and
to the nation in the form of the covenants. In the future the promises will be
fulfilled. They are not fulfilled
yet. They are not in the progress of being
fulfilled which is where you get the term progressive in progressive
dispensationalism – that they are progressively coming into effect. They’re not.
The covenants have been given.
The basis for the New Covenant has been established at the cross, but
there is no inauguration of the covenant until Jesus returns.
Here is our timeline. We have on the left the Old Testament
dispensation, the cross, the Church Age and then the future millennial reign of
Jesus Christ. The Abrahamic Covenant is given at the
beginning of the dispensation of
So last time I covered about five
things. The key scripture we’re going through more of
these tonight.
Then there are ten
provisions. Did I go through those ten
provisions last time? I was going to do
that this time? I skipped them last
time, okay. They were in my notes the
first that’s why I was confused. There
are ten provisions which reinforce this unique state of salvation and the
unique covenant with
So what are those ten provisions? Let me go through those now. This is a summary of what you find in primarily
Jeremiah but also some of the other passages such as Ezekiel 36 and Joel 2 and
some of those passages that are listed.
I am going to leave that up on the screen so people can write down all
of those references and then we will talk about these ten points
Now some of you may be saying, “Wait a minute. What about volition?”
Well,
I think that what I see through the trauma of what happens to
So those are the ten
points. First point, I will review them
real quick.
Now Romans
NKJ Romans
The houtos
there indicates that the writer is getting ready to explain how all of
The key issue for us for the
church (by us I mean the church) is the fact that Jesus refers to the cup in
communion as the New Covenant of My blood. In Luke
Then II Corinthians 3:6 Paul
says:
NKJ 2 Corinthians 3:6 who also made us sufficient as
ministers of the new covenant, not of the letter but of the Spirit; for the
letter kills, but the Spirit gives life.
Hebrews
NKJ Hebrews 9:15 And for this reason He is the
Mediator of the new covenant, by means of death, for the redemption of the
transgressions under the first covenant, that those who are called may receive
the promise of the eternal inheritance.
He being Jesus is the
mediator of a New Covenant. So it seems
from these passages on the surface that there is a relationship between the
church and the New Covenant and that’s been expressed several ways in the
history of dispensational theology. One is
that there are two New Covenants – one with the church and one with
The second view was that the
church participates in the New Covenant only by way of application. This was Darby’s view. The New Covenant with
The third view was that the
church has some part in the covenant. A
number good dispensationalists have taken this view. They try to attach our role soteriologically,
just within the realm of soteriology. I
would say the second view is probably the closest view. I have modified it a little bit. The church participates because of our
position in Christ.
Then the fourth view is the
progressive dispensational view that it was inaugurated on Pentecost but it’s
not fully put into effect. The key word you will hear is already-not-yet. We are already in the kingdom but not-yet
fully here. Or it is progressively
coming into existence and so it’s just the gradual thing. Already-not-yet terminology really comes out
of a theologian from Fuller Seminary in the 50’s and early 60’s named George
Eldon Ladd. Ladd was also a post-tribulationist, but that terminology got picked up by a lot
of charismatics and the Vineyard Movement because if we are living in some form
of the kingdom now and the New Covenant is actually already here and the New
Covenant is going to have these expressions of the Holy Spirit and your old men
dreaming dreams and your young men seeing visions and all of that in Joel 2,
then we need to see that today. That’s
what they were doing.
I remember pigeon holing one
of the architects of progressive dispensationalism in a stacks of the library
of Dallas Seminary in 1988 and saying, “Can you give me a clear theological
exegetical reason why progressive dispensationalism isn’t going to end up
validating signs and wonders in this age because of the way you handle Joel 2
and Acts 2?”
The answer was basically, “Well
that’s not really a legitimate application.”
But then there was a guy who
came out of Moody who was a progressive dispensationalist and he also argued
that we ought to be seeing signs and wonders like that today. You can’t escape the implication. If we are already in the kingdom and we already
have some form of the New Covenant, then we ought to be having these miraculous
manifestations of the Holy Spirit that are descried in Joel 2 and these other
passages. But we’re not!. That’s just similarities. That’s why understanding that this is
that. This is what the prophet said in
Joel 2 is so important. How you
understand that phrase…how that phrase is understood in relationship to the
Church Age and the New Covenant basically is a watershed interpretation. It changes how you understand the church, how
you understand the Holy Spirit, charismatic issues. All these things are related. Just in one little phrase, how you take that
can be taken so differently.
Then last time we looked at
the first place the New Covenant is really mentioned historically, Hosea
2:17-18 where Hosea said:
NKJ Hosea
NKJ Hosea
That’s millennial
terminology. No more war. So this is the
first indication of a future permanent covenant. Then we get into Isaiah and the various
passages in Isaiah and that’s where we will stop tonight. Isaiah 49:55, 59 - all these passages add
different elements and they are very important because they connect the role of
the Messiah. Isaiah 42 is in the second
part of Isaiah. The first part of
Isaiah, 1-39 is all about future judgment on the nation – how God is going to
punish
NKJ Isaiah 42:6 "I, the LORD, have called You
in righteousness, And will hold Your hand; I will keep You and give You as a
covenant to the people, As a light to the Gentiles,
Jesus Himself is that
covenant. He embodies the covenant with
His work on the cross. He will be a
light to the Gentiles. That is quoted in
a couple of passages in the New Testament related to Jesus’ work on the cross
because it breaks down the barrier between the Jew and Gentile. So – a lot to get into here. It’s going to be fun and interesting to work
through these passages.
Let’s bow our heads in
closing prayer.