Hebrews 10:1-18 · Christ’s Sacrifice Once for All
Look What Happened On The Cross!
Hebrews 10:16-25
Sermon
by Mark Ellingsen
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Americans (human beings) are very divided. Some of our divisions have to do with who we are. Black-white tensions caused by the police killings of Black men have made the divisions clearer. A 2016 Pew Research poll found that while 61% of African-Americans find Black-white relations poor, only 46% of whites have such an assessment. The election of Donald Trump verified the polls’ findings regarding negative American attitudes toward immigrants. We are badly divided by social class, regardless of ethnicity, as eminent social commentator Charles Murray has pointed out. He has found few commonalities professional and working class people share (how little people from different classes know each other’s likes and dislikes).[1] We are also divided by religion. Good Friday is a time to confess our sins, because our divisions brought Christ to the cross.

Do you agree? Are we as a nation not divided? Think of the tensions in your personal or professional life. Confess them. Think of the people you don’t enjoy much. Good Friday is a time to confess your sins. Your sins and mine are the reason Jesus went to the cross.

Divisions like we have been considering are consequences of how you look at life. When we are in conflict, it is a function of our making judgments about our neighbors and finding them wanting. It happens when we evaluate our reality and those around us in accord with certain rules of behavior and being. When you do that you are living under the law, operating with certain demands that people need to live up to, and then you judge them. This is living under the old covenant (Exodus 19:5). But our lesson declares that Christ’s sacrificial work has replaced that way of doing business with the new covenant. Today, on the cross, Christ the high priest has ushered in the new covenant (v.15). That’s what Good Friday is all about.

This new covenant is characterized by forgiveness, not by the judgmentalism of the old covenant which has led to all our tensions (vv.17-18). When you have Christ, you are already holy and righteous, John Calvin says. Christ is the fountain of both.[2]    

Our lesson elaborates further on this point. The new covenant, it says, gives us confidence to enter the temple sanctuary, and so in that sense, direct access to God (vv.19-20). And this gives us full assurance of being free from an evil conscience (vv.22-23)! Methodist founder John Wesley nicely makes this point:

As by rending the veil in the temple, the holy of holies became visible and accessible, so by wounding the body of Christ, the God of heaven was manifested and the way to heaven opened.[3]

Freed from judgment in this way, you and I are also set free from judging others!

Hear that? Good Friday is about the end of being judgmental. On the cross, God has made it clear that he is not in judgment about us. And when you are not judged yourself, you won’t find yourself needing to judge others so much anymore. When judgments of others stop, you won’t find yourself so divided from others either.  

In line with this thinking, the author of Hebrews (it was probably not Paul, but someone belonging to the generation of his young followers), proceeds to note that in view of this new way Christ’s sacrifice has created, we are to look for ways to provoke each other to good deeds, meeting together, and encouraging each other (vv.24-25). Christ’s sacrificial work on the cross brings us together and, like I noted, overcomes the divisions we’ve been considering.

What happened on the cross is that Jesus died for all of us! The divisions are gone (unless we introduce them again). Political arguments and racial and gender differences did not matter to Jesus on the cross. What then should matter to us?

Martin Luther says that “he who relies on Christ through faith is carried on the shoulders of Christ...”[4] We are all on those shoulders together, and so no need to be divided. There’s no room for squabbling on Christ’s shoulders. The ancient Greek poet Aesop said it well: “In union there is strength.” Likewise, the nineteenth-century American poet George Pope Morris well summarized the point of this lesson: “United we stand, divided we fall.”  

The great preacher of the early church John Chrysostom was commenting on verse 24 of our lesson and its reference to provoking one another to love and good deeds. He proclaimed:

For if a stone rubbed against a stone sends forth fire, how much more soul mingled with soul.[5] 

We are set on fire with love for each other. But how does the fire start? Of course it begins with Jesus and what he did that day on the cross. The fire in our hearts is lit by God. Founder of the Quakers William Penn said it well, that coals from God must kindle our fire. You need God in Christ to set your heart on fire, the fire of love that can make you overcome divisions. 

When you are on fire with this kind of love, all the divisions get burned away. John Wesley’s brother Charles made a penetrating observation: “Catch on fire with enthusiasm and people will come for miles to watch you burn,” he said. The fire of God’s love attracts people.

No two ways about it. Life is so much better, so much more in harmony, we are so much more unified, because Jesus put us all on his shoulders and died this day for each and every single human being. No room for squabbling on Jesus’ shoulders no matter how broad those shoulders are. That’s what makes this Friday good. His sacrifice burns away all the divisions among us, burns down all the pettiness of the present order of things, and sets you and me and all the faithful on fire with his love! His fire turns us into subversive rebels towards the ways of the world.


[1] Charles Murray, Coming Apart: The State of White America, 1960-2010 (New York: Cox and Murray, 2012).

[2] John Calvin, “Commentaries On the Epistle of St. Paul To the Hebrews” (1549), in Calvin’s Commentaries, Vol. XXII/1, trans. James Anderson, p.236.

[3] John Wesley, Commentary On the Bible, ed. G. Roger Schoenhals (Grand Rapids, MI: Francis Asbury Press, 1990), p.568.

[4] Martin Luther, “Lectures on Hebrews” (1517-1518), in Luther’s Works, Vol. 29, p.226.

[5] John Chrysostom, “Homilies On Epistle To Hebrews,” in Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, First Series, Vol.14, ed. Philip Schaff, p.455.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., A Rebellious Faith: Cycle B sermons for Lent & Easter based on the second lesson texts, by Mark Ellingsen