Hebrews

Find a sermon associated with this book in the Bible below.

The sermon emphasizes the importance of gathering as a church community to worship, draw near to God, hold fast to the hope in Christ, and encourage one another in love and good deeds, as outlined in Hebrews 10:19-25. It warns against spiritual passivity and consumeristic Christianity, urging believers to live in light of the coming day of the Lord, fostering a community that reflects the transformative power of the gospel.

Pastor Christopher stresses the vital role of community and encouragement in overcoming sin and spiritual stagnation. He explains that believers must actively support one another through comfort, correction, and courage to maintain faithfulness and avoid being hardened by sin.

This sermon, based on Hebrews 12, teaches that God disciplines us not in anger but as a loving trainer, using painful hardships to nurture our growth and produce righteousness. We are called to endure this process, trusting that His discipline is for our good and leads to ultimate blessings, including healing and sanctification.

This sermon focuses on the Incarnation—God becoming human in Jesus—as the ultimate example of God's humility, which provides a foundation for a proper view of ourselves and others. It encourages believers to be "incarnation people" by living out this same humility, denying their own rights for the flourishing of others, and bringing "Shalom" (peace) to a broken world, particularly in the face of racial injustice.

This sermon explains that Christians can endure hardship by understanding that God, as a perfect parent, uses discipline to train and nurture His children. It emphasizes that this divine discipline is a sign of His love, which, though painful in the moment, ultimately produces a peaceful fruit of righteousness and allows believers to share in God's holiness.

This sermon explains that Jesus, the ultimate revelation of God, brings the final and living Word that breathes life into our relationship with Him, signifying that the need for a fragmented revelation has passed. The message emphasizes that the Bible's authority and life-giving power are rooted in Jesus' identity and finished work on the cross, which fulfilled all righteousness and atoned for our sins, making a transformative relationship with God possible.

This sermon explains that genuine, enduring faith is not achieved by focusing on one's own efforts, but by "beholding the Lamb of God," Jesus Christ, as the ultimate object of our faith. The message highlights that by understanding Jesus's sacrifice as the means to satisfy God's wrath and judgment, we are empowered to live a transformed life of grace, forgiveness, and love.

This sermon demonstrates that enduring faith is a "hyper-standing" against cultural currents and personal crises. The message highlights that Moses's endurance came from considering God's eternal reward, obeying despite the cost, and seeing the invisible God, a reality now made tangible through Jesus Christ, the "greater Moses" who endured far more for our redemption.

This sermon, using the life of Abraham from Hebrews 11, teaches that steadfast faith is not about mastering circumstances but about responding to them with resilience and a focus on God's truth. The message emphasizes that our ability to live with courage and generosity on earth is rooted in the assurance of a future heavenly citizenship and the unwavering faithfulness of God, who fulfills His promises despite our failures.