Hebrews 10:19-39 · A Call to Persevere
After Good Friday
Hebrews 10:16-25
Sermon
by Richard W. Ferris
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Obsolete. Superceded. Null and void.

Those are words that could be used in a court of law to describe legal contracts or agreements that are no longer in effect. Stipulations become obsolete with the passing of time or when two partners break off their partnership, whether it's a business or a marriage. Procedures can be superceded by new practices when old stipulations become obsolete. Whole contracts can become null and void when one side or the other fails to live up to the agreement.

Now the happiest resolution to a contract dispute comes when one side offers the other a better deal. Take a professional athlete for example. If a team owner says, "Let's forget about the three-year, $10 million deal we have going. I want to offer you a seven-year, $50 million contract." That's a better offer. It assures the athlete four more years of guaranteed salary, and about $28 million dollars more than the rate he's now receiving. And it assures the team owner that the athlete will play on his team for four years more than he's now obligated.

Of course in our modern world, a lot can change in three years, and the athlete might want to hold out to see if a better offer comes by. Another team could offer him more money with more incentives. On the other hand, the athlete could permanently injure himself and not get as good an offer as he has now. Contracts can be risky.

God, however, doesn't make contracts. He makes covenants. Covenants are not based on material property or services rendered; they are based on trust. Covenants are based on relationships. Covenants are promises that are made voluntarily and accepted of one's own accord.

Down through history God has made covenants with his people. God made a covenant with the first people in the Garden of Eden when he told Adam and Eve they could live there forever as long as they obeyed him. Of course, the first two people with whom God ever made a deal broke that first covenant. And thus began a history of disobedience.

God made a covenant with Noah after God flooded the earth. He told Noah that he would never again destroy the earth by flooding. As a sign of this covenant, he put the rainbow in the sky, to remind Noah and his ancestors of his promise. Noah accepted God's promise. God made a covenant with Abraham. He promised Abraham that he would be the father of many nations, that his offspring would be more numerous than the stars in the heavens and the sands of the seashore. All this he promised to a man who should have been a great-grandfather by this time, and who, as yet, had no children with his wife Sarah. But God promised, and Abraham believed, and a covenant was made. God made his stipulations to Abraham and gave circumcision as a sign of his covenant.

God gave Moses some stipulations of this covenant that he made with Abraham and we call them the Ten Commandments. He told Moses and the Israelites to obey and that he would be their God and that they would be his people. As an added incentive, God would continue to lead them safely away from the Egyptians and into the Promised Land. We know that these people were a stubborn people and that it took forty years to get there, but God was true to his promise.

Down through the years there was give and take, laws to obey, and directions to follow. The people were to do their part, and God would provide salvation and protection, and establish them as a great nation. The people made sacrifices as ordered. They followed rituals as directed. They negotiated with God to have a king appointed. They fought wars and lost lives under the banner of the Most High. Israel was the nation of God and God was source of their strength.

But the covenant was weakened time and time again. Not by God, he held up his part of the agreement. It was the people who came up short, over and over again. They disobeyed his commandments. They strayed from their loyalty to him. They worshiped other gods in the forms of materialism, greed, power, and lust. It became apparent that something had to be done to rectify the situation. So God made a better offer.

Now we don't know for sure, but we can assume that God in all of his wisdom knew from the start what would happen. And so, he had a back-up plan: Jesus. A new covenant that would end all covenants. A covenant between the Creator and the creation that would cover everything once and for all, and that would supercede all former covenants making them obsolete and null and void. After Good Friday, things were changed forever. After Good Friday, God had spoken. After Good Friday, all else was forgotten, including the sins of the world. For on Good Friday, the final sacrifice was made, and nothing more could be done to reconcile people with their God. Easter was the day that the victorious court verdict of "Not Guilty" was pronounced upon all humankind, but it was on Good Friday that the deciding evidence was laid to rest.

Somebody had to do it, and Jesus was that someone.

In olden days, during the dark winters of a frozen Alaska, food was often scarce. A young man would venture out, armed only with a pointed stick and a compassion for his starving Eskimo village. He would wander about in the darkness, anticipating an attack of a polar bear. Having no natural fear of humans, a polar bear would stalk and eat a man. When a bear would attack, the Eskimo hunter would wave his hands and spear to anger his attacker and make the bear rise up on his hind legs to over ten feet in height. Then, with the spear braced to his foot, the hunter would aim for the heart as the weight of the bear came down upon his spear. With heart pierced, the bear might live long enough to maim or kill this noble hunter. Loving family and friends would then follow his tracks out of the village and find food for their survival. They also found evidence of profound courage and sacrifice.

Early Christian missionaries to the Eskimos proclaimed that Jesus Christ is the "Good Hunter" who lays down his life for the world. It was an illustration they could understand, and one that can remind us why Jesus did what he did. Because of God's love and compassion for us, Jesus became the New Covenant he would make with his people. A covenant that transcends all times and all places, and puts every living being in a new relationship with God.

There was a little girl whose parents had lived in a miserable marriage and finally ended it in a divorce. Having felt they had nothing in common except for their affection for the child, they broke their covenant. One day the girl was seriously injured when she was struck by bus as she raced into the street while playing. Taken to the hospital, she was examined by the doctors but was found to be beyond human aid. The parents were given the sad news and stood silently, one on either side of the bed, looking down helplessly at their only child. As they stood there, the girl's eyes suddenly opened and seeing her parents she tried to smile. Then drawing one arm from under the sheet, she held it out in the direction of her father. "Daddy," she said, "give me your hand." Turning to her mother, she stretched out her other arm. "Mommy," she said, "give me your hand." Then with a final effort of her faltering strength, she drew them together.

This is a picture of what Christ did on the cross. Our Savior took the hand of sinful, hateful humanity and placed it in the loving hand of God. Jesus became the New Covenant, making it possible for us to be reconciled to God. Jesus broke down the barrier that existed under the old covenant. He restored the broken fellowship caused by sin and turning our backs on God.

The little girl died with a vision of her parents together. But what would happen after that would take an effort on the part of the parents. Jesus died to bring God and us together again, but even under the New Covenant we have to make the effort to keep the relationship going.

A New Covenant has been created between God and his people. In this covenant, the laws are not written on tablets of stone, but in the hearts and minds of the believers. God promises this in the New Covenant: "I will remember their sins and their lawless deeds no more. Where there is forgiveness of these, there is no longer any offering for sin." No more sacrifices necessary. The New Covenant is an "after Good Friday" covenant. It is sealed with the blood of Christ and therefore nothing more needs to be added. Only our commitment is to believe it.

A little boy came to the Washington Monument and noticed a guard standing by. The boy looked up at the guard and said, "I want to buy it." The guard stooped down and asked, "How much do you have?" The boy reached into his pocket and pulled out a quarter. The guard said, "That's not enough." The boy replied, "I thought you would say that." So he pulled out nine cents more. The guard looked down at the boy and said, "You need to understand three things. First, 34 cents is not enough. In fact, $34 million is not enough to buy the Washington Monument. Second, the Washington Monument is not for sale. And third, if you are an American citizen, the Washington Monument already belongs to you."

We need to understand three things about what happened on Good Friday and the covenant of forgiveness that came out of it. First, we cannot earn God's forgiveness. Second, it's not for sale. And third, if we believe that Christ died for us on that cross, then we already have his forgiveness.

Isn't it wonderful to be living after Good Friday? Isn't it great to be reconciled to God? Isn't it assuring to know that forgiveness and salvation are ours, that the ultimate sacrifice has been made, and that through the New Covenant of Jesus Christ, nothing more is needed?

Then go ... Good Friday has passed and Easter has established the New Covenant. Live in an Easter world, free from the bonds of sin, and the grip of death. Live with the knowledge of a risen Lord, and an ever-loving God. But always remember, without the payment made on Good Friday, there would be no after.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Sermons for Sundays: In Lent and Easter: Temptation of the Palms, by Richard W. Ferris