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Well, as we begin a new chapter in the book of Hebrews, chapter 10, I would like to relate to you that I am a calendar man.
What do I mean by that?
Well, what I mean is that I have become somebody who has their life pretty well directed by what is on my calendar.
This past weekend we had the Evans’ over to our house and Courtney caught a glance at the calendar Kate has on her phone.
She seemed pretty surprised that it had so many entries on it.
That is sort of something that happens when you are active in church, and have extracurricular activities for your kids, and occasionally are wanting to spend time with your own friends or to just have a date night with your husband or wife.
For us, if it doesn't get put down in a calendar it isn't going to happen.
Work is the same way anymore.
I block schedule my days by the half an hour every single workday.
And what is amazing is just how badly that plan that I come up with gets blown into pieces.
But I at least still attempt to make a plan.
Technology has helped quite a bit.
Years ago I used to keep a giant desk calendar.
If it wasn’t covered by papers I could look at it and get a pretty good idea of what I had scheduled.
But now I have my Calendar on my computer and it syncs with my phone and I get alerts that pop up on my screens whenever a scheduled activity is beginning.
I even get those reminders on my watch accompanied by a little vibration to get my attention.
But the technology, as cool as it is — isn’t the end goal.
That is something that is especially easy for me to lose sight of because I am a tech guy.
The end goal isn’t the reminder, it is the thing I am being reminded of.
Nobody is going to be impressed that I have a reminder to make a presentation at work, it’s the presentation that they care about.
My wife isn’t going to be impressed that I have a reminder on my phone that we are going on vacation, what she wants is for me to show up — on the vacation.
It sounds simple but that is really one of the points that this first section of Hebrews 10 is trying to get across.
— In terms of a calendar on my phone, you get my point.
But, it is another thing entirely to apply this spiritually.
If you have your Bibles, please turn them over to Hebrews 10:1-14
The title of this message is Continual Sacrifice and it is the first message in our series A Once for All Life.
Let’s Pray
The Draw of Sacrifice
Hebrews 10, really a lot of the book of Hebrews talks a lot about sacrifice.
The idea that the temple sacrifice was just a picture is something that has to get reiterated over and over.
You can understand from the standpoint of Judaism why that would be important, but it is just as important for you and I as we evaluate our faith.
We are drawn to sacrifice.
Because we prefer it over obedience.
I am not discounting that the law puts man under a curse.
That is what Galatians 3:10 says
There is an obvious need to come out from under the curse.
That is sort of a main theme in Christianity that I think is probably not lost on you.
But if you are given 2 choices: sacrifice or obedience, we prefer sacrifice.
Especially if we have something to sacrifice.
This reminds me of my first year as Cubmaster for son’s Cub Scout pack years ago.
The pack had some serious budget issues and some hard decisions had to be made.
The solution that we came up with was to provide an over-all cost for a kid to be in the program, however if they did fundraising they could reduce that over-all cost down to nothing.
There were a lot of people who just wanted to pay whatever it cost to be in the program so that they don’t have to be bothered with the work of fundraising.
It’s this same attitude that draws people to preferring sacrifice.
it’s the religious equivalent of -- just writing a check.
— I mean, we could be obedient, but it’s a lot easier for us to just do whatever we want and just pay what has to be paid later.
Over a year ago our church gathered in my families living room on Sunday nights and we studied the Way of the Master series on biblical evangelism.
What was easily noticed and what you undoubtedly will notice is you spend any time sharing the gospel is that most people, even most people who consider themselves to be Christians, believe that they are going to get into heaven by having their good outweigh their bad.
— Some people even have this idea that if they sin, and it is weighing on their conscience, that they can confess their sins to a priest who will give them some sort of task to complete for absolution.
Who do I make the check out to.
Preferred Obedience
Look with me again at verses 5-7 of Hebrews 10.
It quotes Ps 40:6-8.
And it says this of the Messiah:
Verse 5 has two parts a positive statement and a negative, and there is a response in vs 6&7 again a positive and a negative.
I am going to paraphrase and you can follow along in your Bible or up on the screen to see that I am being fair to the text:
In verse 5, to the negative, we read that God the Father wasn’t desiring sacrifice.
— Then the positive, at the end of the verse, we read that a body was prepared for the Messiah.
Verses 6 & 7 make sense of this: In verse 6, we read that God doesn’t get pleasure out of sacrifice and in v7 we read that the Messiah comes to do the will of God — and how does the Messiah do this?
— We just read it, The Father prepared for Him a body.
Strange Phrasing
There is strange phrasing for this in Psalms 40:6
In the Psalm we read “Mine ears hast thou opened” but in Hebrews we read “a body hast thou prepared me”.
— Why the difference?
— Well the literal reading of the Hebrew is a bit strange for us to read, it would read “ears you have dug out for me”
We have this difficult passage interpreted for us in the New Testament by the inspiration of the Holy Spirit.
In the Book of Hebrews by this statement that a Body was prepared.
— A vessel for hearing the will of God and then acting upon it was provided for the Messiah.
Reminder
Sacrifice is only a reminder.
That is how this chapter starts.
Starting in v1
And it starts to make logical sense if we can think of it this way.
Why would God take pleasure in a the reminder.
The temple sacrifices for sin was like visiting the 9/11 memorial in New York City, or the Holocaust Museum in Washington DC.
Nobody goes to these places for delight or happiness.
But they exist to remind us of atrocities commited in the past.
Museums and monuments commemorating atrocities serve as a constant reminder of the depth of depravity the unchecked heart can sink.
— Only, sin has killed far more than either of those terrible events.
A Vessel
Our country has been a buzz with the leaked decision that the Supreme court will overturn Roe v. Wade.
— I have made it no secret that I think that abortion is the single greatest issue facing our country, and the greatest evil that our country has consented to.
A cry made by women who support abortion has been: “My Body, My Choice”.
This slogan breaks down in many ways — But primarily for you and I as a believer — At it’s most fundamental — We should reject that our bodies are for our choice.
We haven’t been given a body for it to perform our own will.
We were formed to do God’s will.
— How could we think that our bodies are dedicated to our own wills when even the body of Christ was formed for the will of the Father?
But — Is that how we view our bodies.
Is your body a vessel of obedience to the Lord?
— When we choose to disobey God what we are saying is “My Body, My Choice”
Really if we want our sacrifice to be pleasing to God it can only be one thing.
Not bulls and goats, and not an attempt to pay our way out of our debt of sin.
But what we read in Romans 12:1
And if our bodies aren’t a sacrifice unto the Lord then we can be assured that no sacrifice that we attempt to place before the throne of God will be accepted.
Closing
This morning as we close I would like you to take a moment to examine your heart.
What are you holding back from God?
Is your body, your life truly given over to God?
If not, make a decision today that you are going to live your life for Christ.
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