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Near to the Heart of God: A Study of the Book of Hebrews Lesson 12 Hebrews 5:11- 6:3 Melchizedek and Maturity

Near to the Heart of God: A Study of the Book of Hebrews Lesson 12 Hebrews 5:11- 6:3 Melchizedek and Maturity. Introduction Two lines of thought have converged thus far in the Book of Hebrews. The supremacy of Christ God’s final word (1:1-4) Vastly superior to angels (1:4-14)

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Near to the Heart of God: A Study of the Book of Hebrews Lesson 12 Hebrews 5:11- 6:3 Melchizedek and Maturity

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  1. Near to the Heart of God:A Study of the Book of HebrewsLesson 12Hebrews 5:11- 6:3Melchizedek and Maturity

  2. Introduction • Two lines of thought have converged thus far in the Book of Hebrews. • The supremacy of Christ • God’s final word (1:1-4) • Vastly superior to angels (1:4-14) • Greater than Moses (3:1-6) • Greater priest than Aaron (4:14ff.) • The deficiency of men • Paradise lost (2:5-8) • Enslaved by fear of death (2:14-15) • Israel’s failure in wilderness (3:7-f:10)

  3. The sufficiency of Christ High Priestly Ministry: The Incarnation Atonement Help in need The deficiency of men

  4. Introduction • Christ as the superior high priest (4:14ff.) • Hold fast our confession(4:14-15) • Draw near for help (4:16) • Christ has superior qualifications to Aaronic priesthood (5:1-9). • Christ’s priesthood is of the order of Melchizedek (5:6, 10). • Parenthetical Pause: A message of motivation (5:11-6:20) • 5:11-6:3 – A cure for sluggish saints • 6:4-8 – Those beyond repentance • 6:9-12 – Convinced of better things • 6:13-20 – Standing on the promises

  5. Introduction • The structure of our text • The author’s assessment (5:11-14) • The author’s approach (6:1-3) • The importance of our text • It assesses our maturity • It prefaces a problem passage (6:4-8) • My approach in this lesson • Answer several crucial questions concerning our text • Suggest areas of contemporary application

  6. Answering the crucial questions • To whom is the author speaking? • Earlier exhortations are to believers (see 4:11-16) • These are Jewish / Hebrew believers. • Three tests • Hearing = dull /sluggish in hearing (vs. 11; see 2:1-4) • Time = should be teachers by now, but aren’t (vs. 12a) • Diet = milk, not meat (vss. 12b-14; see also 1 Cor. 3:1-3; 1 Peter 2:1-3) • The author’s follow-up in 6:9-12 (note repetition of “sluggish” in 6:12)

  7. Answering the crucial questions • What is the malady of these believers? • Note: This is the first clear indication of the problem of these Hebrew recipients. • They need Milk • According to Peter this is good (2:1-3). • According to Paul it is not (1 Cor. 3:1-3). • According to our author it is not (5:11-6:3) • An indication of poor health • Can’t get past the Old Testament • Due to ignorance of “the message of righteousness” (vs. 13) • The desire for / need of beginning elements of God’s utterances (5:12) • A need for ABC’s about Christ (6:1)

  8. Answering the crucial questions • What is the malady of these believers? • What must be left behind (6:1-3)? • The elementary instructions about Christ • The foundation that was laid • Repentance from dead works / faith in God • Baptisms (washings) / laying on of hands • Resurrection / eternal judgment • We must progress beyond these to gain maturity • Mathematics (algebra to calculus) • Apollos (Acts 18:24-28)

  9. Answering the crucial questions • What is the malady of these believers? • Known Jewish problems • In 1 & 2 Corinthians • In Colossians 2 • In 1 Timothy 1:4-11; Titus 1:10-16 • In Galatians • Conclusion: Many of the Hebrew believers were lingering in the “shadows” of the Old Testament, rather than walking in the light of the substance of the New. • It did not require any dramatic change in behavior or application or association. • It avoided persecution. • It seemed to retain a Jewish superiority

  10. Answering the crucial questions • Why “Therefore” in 6:1, instead of “Nevertheless”? (Why does the author press ahead with meat, when they live on milk?”) • Part of the answer will come in 6:4ff. • Because of what the author has already said in chapters 1 and 2. • God has spoken fully and finally in His Son (1:1-4) • We must listen more carefully (2:1-4). • We should understand the shadows in terms of the substance (see Ephesians 3). • People are not challenged to grow by “lowering the bar.” • Melchizedek is the meat they need to grow.

  11. Conclusion and Application • The test of true maturity: not just what we know, but what we do with what we know. (This is also true of judgment – Luke 12:44-48) • How mature am I, according to God’s standard? • What needs to change? • Realize that we need maturity • Teaching should have more meat. • Maturity means growing less dependent on teachers, and being able to teach. • Beware of the “safe zone.” Maturity means greater discernment, and the courage to be different.

  12. Conclusion and Application • Application for Jewish believers • Pressing Gentile believers into Jewish mold • Living in the past, as though it is better • Failure to see the New Covenant as better • The temptation to go “back to Egypt” • The example of Matthew’s Gospel • Application for Gentile believers • The gospel means dramatic change (for example, the Book of Ephesians) • Do we mix patriotism with piety, glorify the past, and strive to go back? • Don’t confuse culture with Christianity. • Watch out in the coming election.

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