Saturday, October 25, 2025

A Beautiful Benediction — Living Out the Better Covenant (Heb 13)

Find a PDF of this entire series here:

Wow- this was a 6 month odyssey for sure!

“Jesus Christ is the same yesterday and today and forever.”
— Hebrews 13:8 (ESV)

After soaring through some of the deepest theology in Scripture, Hebrews finishes with a surprisingly simple reminder: the Gospel must reach the ground. Our beliefs must shape our behavior. Doctrine becomes devotion. Worship becomes a life.

We love one another like family. We welcome strangers like honored guests. We remember those who suffer as if we were in chains beside them. We honor marriage and pursue purity. We loosen the grip money tries to have on our hearts and choose contentment instead. We imitate faithful spiritual leaders, and we keep our hands busy with good works and generosity.

All of this is what grace produces.

Following Jesus means we go where He is — even when the route leads “outside the camp.” We choose Christ over popularity, obedience over comfort, reproach over applause. The world may lift an eyebrow at that kind of devotion, but heaven smiles.

Our worship overflows in two directions — through our lips in praise and through our lives in sacrifice.

My song “Living Sacrifice” reflects that heartbeat:
Take my heart, take my days, let my worship show Your ways…
All I am — I offer You in love.

When grace fills the heart, praise becomes the natural outpouring.

And then comes the blessing — one of the richest in Scripture:

“Now may the God of peace who brought again from the dead our Lord Jesus, the great Shepherd of the sheep… equip you with everything good that you may do His will…”
— Hebrews 13:20–21

My closing song “Benediction” echoes that prayer:
May His peace surround you,
may His grace abound to you,
may His joy be found in you…
until we see His face.

He saved us.
He leads us.
He keeps us.
And one day, He will bring us all the way home.

Amen and amen.

I never know if this work will be a blessing to someone- my secret prayer is that this will be read by my granddaughter, Haynes or grandson, Cannon and they know a little more about their 'Pop'- or a future grandchild or even a great- grandchild who I hope to see in heaven one day.

My testimony is this- as a sinful and fallen man, I have no hope or help outside of Jesus Christ. ALL of history is his story.

The shadow and echoes of the gospel in the OT- the reality of Jesus in space, time, and history, and now over 2,000 years of the church post ascension is all about Him and His desire to expand His covenant blessings on people who outnumber the stars and sand.

May we be found in the great summary- "I will be their God and they will be my people!" AMEN

Saturday, Oct 25, 2025 and 9:41 AM

I am going to take a break for a bit......... I am a very tired man, but very blessed as well.

Find the album here: Hebrews — Songs of Radiance, Rest, and Resolve

Find the lyrics of all the songs here: Hebrews Lyrics

Blogpost review: Radiance to Benediction: A 21-Song Journey Through Hebrews


Embracing Discipline and Perseverance (Hebrews 12)

As a coach who's spent countless hours on the field, guiding teams through grueling practices and high-stakes games, I've always found inspiration in the idea of endurance. Life, much like a marathon or a tough ballgame, demands resilience, focus, and a willingness to push through pain. Recently, I've been diving back into Hebrews 12, a chapter that's like a spiritual playbook for living with intention and faith. It's a powerful reminder that we're not running alone—we're surrounded by a "great cloud of witnesses," and God Himself is our ultimate Coach, disciplining us out of love to shape us into champions.

The chapter opens with these stirring words: "Therefore, since we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses, let us also lay aside every weight, and sin which clings so closely, and let us run with endurance the race that is set before us, looking to Jesus, the founder and perfecter of our faith, who for the joy that was set before him endured the cross, despising the shame, and is seated at the right hand of the throne of God" (Hebrews 12:1-2, ESV). This "therefore" isn't just a transition—it's a bridge to Hebrews 11, the "Hall of Faith," where heroes like Noah, Abraham, Moses, and countless unnamed saints demonstrated unshakeable trust in God. They're the cloud of witnesses, cheering us on from the stands.

The Cloud of Witnesses: Cheering from the Stands

Think about coaching a game in a packed stadium. The fans' energy spills onto the field— that roar after a game-winning tackle or catch creates memories that last a lifetime. But I never coach for the crowd; I'm mindful of them, and their presence adds accountability. You don't want to lay an egg in front of spectators! Now, imagine those stands filled not with everyday fans, but with Hall of Fame legends—former coaches and players who've mastered the game. How much harder would you push? That's the spin Hebrews 12 puts on our spiritual race.

These witnesses aren't grumbling with folded arms; they're shouting, "You can do it!" with excitement and love. Moses, who followed God through impossible odds; Jim Elliot, who prayed to be consumed as fuel for the kingdom; Mother Teresa, serving the destitute with boundless compassion—they ran their races well, and now they're pulling for us. It inspires me to go deeper, longer, leaner. Sure, in athletic circles, we talk about the "audience of one"—pleasing God alone, not seeking human praise. That's vital. But embracing the cheers of these faith warriors? That's equally motivational. They remind us: if they endured, so can we.

I recall running the Music City Marathon, buoyed by crowds and live music. Around mile 8, amid a sea of faces, I spotted a football parent and great encourager. His smile and hug gave me that extra "MOJO" Hebrews 12 says we're cheered by even greater heroes. In your corner: Noah, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Moses, Gideon, David. They've passed the baton of faith—now it's our turn.

How to Run: Laying Aside Weights and Sin

To run effectively, we must "lay aside every weight, and sin which clings so closely." Run lean and light. This means ditching not just sin, but even good things that become baggage—time-wasters, distractions, comforts like leisure, overeating, or self-promotion for me. Sin, from the Greek hamartia (missing the mark, like an archer off-target), is poison. It takes you further than you want, keeps you longer, costs more. "Sin will take you further than you want to go, keep you longer than you want to stay, and cost you more than you want to pay."

In a world of instant gratification, endurance is rare. How quickly do we quit marriages because they're "hard"? Let go of relationships that aren't "working"? Teach kids to bail on commitments? God has a unique marathon for each of us—tough, but worth it. And our example? Jesus, who endured the cross with joy set before Him. Misunderstood, betrayed, beaten—He could have quit, but didn't. He saw us, redeemed and robes washed white. That's the victory we're running toward.

Hebrews 12 shifts to discipline: "Consider him who endured from sinners such hostility against himself, so that you may not grow weary or fainthearted... For the Lord disciplines the one he loves, and chastises every son whom he receives" (Hebrews 12:3-6). God treats us as sons, not illegitimate children. Earthly fathers discipline as best they can (my dad used a belt; Mom, a bush branch—stinging, but formative). But God disciplines perfectly, for our good, yielding "the peaceful fruit of righteousness."

Discipline feels painful, not pleasant—like rigorous training. Yet it refines character, draws us closer to Him. Challenges aren't arbitrary; they're tools for growth. As a coach, I see this in society: we're losing the will to discipline. Parents want rules for others but bristle at consequences for their kids. We equate "no" with hate, pain with lovelessness. But true love involves short-term pain for long-term gain.

I will read this passage to my students from time to time- including the inference of verse 10 that 'fathers' sometimes make the wrong decision in discipline thinking we are doing good- but God disciplines us for good.

But I do see a fruit of standing firm in business-like discipline. Not yelling but explaining punishment and gradually increasing the severity until the message clicks- it is much better and easier to obey.

However, it is a PROCESS- "those who have been trained by it"

APPLYING THIS MINISTRY:

Personally- I need to fess up to God and see the areas that I need more self control and need to practice being more disciplined. This includes applying the disciplines of grace- Bible study, prayer, to my life in a more consistent way.

As a Dad: I did not like disciplining or correcting my children. I like peace. But if I do not correct them, I AM NOT LOVING THEM. My tendency was to do great while they were little but back away as they got more sophisticated. But if I did not address issues of laziness, or respect, or attitude... I am not helping them. There are times to do this and times to back up..... but hard conversations and possible consequences that stick need to be administered. Our youth tend to disregard authority and our role as parents is to nip that in the bud. A child left alone will not move upward.

My daughters are all grown now, married, no more discipline (from me). But I do see the fruit of that grace.

The Glorious Contrast: From Fear to Grace

Hebrews 12 contrasts Mount Sinai's terror—blazing fire, darkness, trumpet blasts, where even Moses trembled—with Mount Zion: heavenly Jerusalem, angels, the assembly of the firstborn, God as judge, spirits made perfect, Jesus the mediator. We've come to grace, not wrath. Yet, "see that you do not refuse him who is speaking... for our God is a consuming fire" (Hebrews 12:25-29).

We often dilute the gospel: "You're good, just fix a few things." But the bad news is gruesome—we're sinners hanging by a thread over wrath's pit, as Jonathan Edwards preached in "Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God." We're not sick needing medicine; we're dead needing resurrection. The cross absorbed God's fury, shielding us. That's the glorious gospel: wrath satisfied, grace poured out.

H. Richard Niebuhr critiqued our watered-down version: "A God without wrath brought men without sin into a kingdom without judgment through the ministrations of a Christ without a cross." Don't settle for that. Preach the full truth.

Finishing Strong: Get Up and Win the Race

Strive for peace, holiness; avoid bitterness, immorality like Esau. Lift drooping hands, strengthen weak knees—make straight paths.

I'll close with this inspirational poem by Dr. D.H. “Dee” Groberg, "Get Up and Win the Race":

‘Quit’ Give up, you’re beaten!‘ they shout at me and plead. ‘There’s just too much against you now, this time you can’t succeed.’ And as I started to hang my head in front of failures face, My downward fall is broken by the memory of a race. And hope refills my weakened will, as I recall that scene, And just the thought of that short race rejuvenates my being. A children’s race. Young boys, young men, I remember well. Excitement, sure, but also fear; it wasn’t hard to tell They all lined up so full of hope. The thought to win that race. Or tie for first, or if not that, at least take second place. And fathers watched from off the side, each cheering for his son, And each boy hoped to show his Dad, that he would be the one. (The whistle blew).To win, to be the hero there, was each boy’s young desire. And one boy in particular, his Dad was in the crowd, Was running near the lead and thought. ‘My Dad will be so proud.‘ But as he sped down the field across a shallow dip, The little boy who thought to win, lost his step and slipped, Trying hard to catch himself, his hands flew out to brace, And mid the laughter of the crowd he fell flat on his face. So, down he fell and with him hope. He couldn’t win it now. Embarrassed, sad, he only wished to disappear somehow. But, as he fell, his Dad stood up and showed his anxious face. Which to the boy so clearly said, ‘Get up and win the race!‘ He quickly rose, no damage done, behind a bit that’s all, And ran with all his mind and might to make up for his fall. So anxious to restore himself, to catch up and to win, His mind went faster than his legs. He slipped and fell again. He wished that he had quit before with only one disgrace. ‘I’m hopeless as a runner now, I shouldn’t try to race.‘ But, in the laughing crowd he searched and found his father’s face, That steady look that said again, ‘Get up and win the race.‘ So up he jumped to try again, ten yards behind the last, ‘If I’m to gain those yards,’ he thought, ‘I’ve got to run real fast.‘ Expanding everything he had, he regained eight or ten But trying so hard to catch the lead, he slipped and fell again. ‘Defeat!‘ He lay there silently, a tear dropped from his eye. ‘There’s no sense running any more, three strikes, I’m out, why try?‘ The will to rise had disappeared, all hope had fled away, So far behind, so error prone, closer all the way. ‘I’ve lost so what’s the use?’ he thought, ‘I’ll live with my disgrace.‘ ‘Get up‘, an echo sounded low, ‘Get up,’ it said, ‘you haven’t lost it all. For winning is no more than this: to rise each time you fall.“ So he rose to win once more, and with a new commit, He resolved that win or lose, at least he wouldn’t quit, So far behind the others now, the most he’d ever been, Still he gave it all he had and ran as through to win. Three times he’d fallen, three times he rose again. They cheered the winning runner as he crossed the line, first place, Head high and proud and happy; no falling, no disgrace. But when the fallen youngster crossed the finishing line, last place, The crowd gave him the greater cheer for finishing the race, And even though he came in last, with head bowed low, un-proud, You would have thought he won the race, to listen to the crowd. And to his dad he sadly said, ‘I didn’t do so well.‘ ‘To me you won.‘ His father said. ‘You rose each time you fell.‘ And now when times seem dark and hard and difficult to face,. For all of life is like that race, with ups and downs and all, And all you have to do to win is rise each time you fall, ‘Quit! Give up you’re beaten!‘ they still shout in my face, But another voice within me says, ‘Get up and win the race!‘

Hebrews 12 calls us to endure, looking to Jesus. Who's cheering you on? What weights will you lay aside? Let's run with joy—God's got us.

Friday, October 24, 2025

Resting in the Object of Our Hope (Hebrews 11)

“Now faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen.”

— Hebrews 11:1 (ESV)

Faith isn’t a feeling. It’s not vague optimism or wishful thinking. Faith rests — because faith has something, or rather Someone, strong enough to lean on.

When I ride a roller coaster, I don’t put my confidence in my own white-knuckled grip. I relax into the restraint that holds me. The same is true in the life of a believer. If the object of faith is a chair, you sit. If the object is a ride restraint, you lean back. If the object is Christ, you stop trusting in yourself and rest in Him.

Faith is the visible act of trusting an invisible God.

Hebrews 11 then leads us through a living hallway of witnesses whose lives still preach: Abel offered what God desired most, Noah obeyed before rain had even been invented, Abraham stepped into the unknown, Moses gave up privilege for the sake of Christ’s reproach, Rahab risked everything on a promise she could not yet see.

The lyrics of "World Not Worthy" traces it:

By faith Abel gave an offering,

By faith Noah built the ark,

By faith Abraham left the homeland,

By faith Sarah bore the spark.

They saw the promise from a distance,

They confessed they were strangers here.

Looking for a better country,

God prepared a home so near.

By faith Moses left the palace,

Chose disgrace with God’s own side.

By faith walls of Jericho crumbled,

By faith the sea opened wide.

Kingdoms conquered, justice given,

Lions’ mouths were closed in fear.

Weakness turned to strength in battle,

Faith that overcomes the years.


Some were tortured, chained, and beaten,

Some were sawn and left unnamed.

Wandered deserts, caves, and mountains,

Still they praised His holy name.

The world was not worthy of them,

Their faith was their victory crown.

They looked ahead to the Savior,

To the King who’s coming down.


The world not worthy of them,

They carried the fire within.

By faith they lived, by faith they died,

The promise burning in their eyes.

The world not worthy of them,

Yet heaven calls them as friends.

By faith we run, our eyes on Him,

The author, finisher—our King!

They all saw future promises more clearly than present circumstances. They didn’t get the full reward in their lifetime — but they saw enough of God to trust Him anyway.

And then comes that chilling line: “…sawn in two.” According to early tradition, this was Isaiah under the wicked reign of Manasseh. No applause. No comfort. No earthly payoff. But heaven took notice.

Hebrews says, “The world was not worthy of them.” Some people live by sight and chase the approval of crowds. Others choose what pleases God even when it costs them dearly. The world doesn’t know how to measure what God calls precious.

The chapter ends without a conclusion, because the story of faith continues with us. “God had provided something better for us…” (Hebrews 11:40). We exercise faith when the answer hasn’t come, when the wound hasn’t healed, when the longing remains beyond reach. We look to Christ — the founder and perfecter of our faith — and believe that soon, very soon, we will see clearly what we trust today.

Lord, give us faith that rests — not in our grip, but in Your grace. Amen.


Shadow and Substance (Hebrews 10)


“For since the law has but a shadow of the good things to come instead of the true form of these realities…”

— Hebrews 10:1 (ESV)

Some shadows look convincing — but shadows are never the real thing.

The Law — with its priests, sacrifices, and rituals — was rich with God-given meaning, yet limited in power. It formed expectations, revealed sin, and pointed forward… but it could not finish the job.

A shadow can show you a shape.
It can reveal something is near.
But it cannot save.

Hebrews 10 invites us to step out of the shadows and into the substance — Christ Himself.

In high school, I got my first taste of faith when I rode the Looping Starship at Six Flags, Atlanta. It finally dawned on me, when I go upside down, I will be fine. So, I didn’t white-knuckle the safety bar. I relaxed, even upside down, I opened my eyes, let my arms fall- looked down and saw all the money, keys, and sunglasses of passengers falling down. I ‘trusted’ that bar and found freedom and fun…. Christ is MUCH more trustworthy.

Faith always has an object:

  • If it’s a chair — you sit on it

  • If it’s a ride — you lean back into it

  • If it’s Jesus — you rest in His finished work

Faith is not the power of my hold on God.
Faith is the power of God’s hold on me.

The Law said: “Hold on tight!”
The Gospel says: “Christ holds you.”


Hebrews 10 shows how the Old Testament anticipated Jesus:

It is FULL of these Old Testament quotes:

  • Psalm 40:6–8 — “Behold, I have come to do your will…”

  • Jeremiah 31:33–34 — God’s law written on hearts

  • Habakkuk 2:3–4 — the righteous live by faith

These aren’t random proof-texts.
They are threads woven together into a tapestry revealing Christ.

The author of Hebrews knows the Scriptures — especially the Septuagint (Greek version of the OT) — with deep fluency. And he uses them to show:

Jesus didn’t cancel the Law.
He completed it.

Every lamb on every altar whispered:

“He is coming.”

Hebrews 10 is all about the fulfillment of all the old types and shadows. 

Under the old covenant:

  • Priests stood daily

  • Sacrifices were repeated constantly

  • Sin was never fully removed

But Jesus — our Great High Priest — sat down.

Why?

Because the work was done.

“For by a single offering he has perfected for all time those who are being sanctified.”
(Hebrews 10:14)

No more striving to appease God.
No more offerings for guilt.
No more fear of not being enough.


This leads to the wonderful “Let us” statements in this chapter.

Because Christ has opened the way:

Let us draw near with a true heart… (v. 22)
Let us hold fast the confession of our hope… (v. 23)
Let us consider how to stir up one another to love and good works… (v. 24)

Three “Let us” commands — a community response:

Draw near — no fear
Hold fast — no turning back
Stir up one another — no walking alone

This is not just “me and Jesus.”

Faith flourishes best in a family.

Hebrews is honest about the danger of spiritual drift:

“Do not throw away your confidence…” (v. 35)

We lose confidence when:

  • We trust our grip over His grace

  • We isolate instead of gather

  • We forget what Christ has already done

The warning is loving, not threatening.

Hebrews 10 doesn’t say:

“Shape up or God will ditch you.”

It says:

“Don’t forget who holds you.”

We are not of those who shrink back.

The Substance Has Come — Why Live in the Shadows?

The Law was a necessary shadow — a divine preview.
But Jesus is the full reality.

Shadows say, “Something is coming.”
Jesus says, “I came for you.”

Shadows warn.
Jesus saves.

Shadows expose sin.
Jesus removes it.

When we cling to old systems of self-sufficiency, it’s like squeezing the safety bar with all our might — forgetting the bar is what holds us.

Christ has secured our present and our future.

Song Link: Let Us (Hebrews 10)