I had the privilege of preaching this past Sunday at Twin Falls Church of the Nazarene, and I want to share something with you that I think could change the way you read your Bible. We were in Hebrews chapter 4, and the big idea is this - the Bible is not the destination. It is the road. The written Word of God is like a letter from someone you love deeply. You read it slowly, you feel them in every word, and it is a precious thing. But the letter is not the person. It was made to point you to the Person. The Bible is the portrait. Jesus is the Person. And the whole point of the portrait is to make you want the Person so badly you cannot stay away from Him.
Now, Hebrews 4:12 tells us that the Word of God is quick and powerful and sharper than any two-edged sword. That word "quick" does not mean fast. It means alive. And here is what Pastor James helped me see when John opens his gospel and says "in the beginning was the Word," that is the same Greek word used right here in Hebrews. The written Word and the living Word are connected. And the sword of verse 12 belongs to a Person because verse 13 makes the shift from "it" to "Him." He sees everything. The thoughts, the intents, the fear underneath the anger, the wound underneath the performance. Nothing is managed or hidden before Him. And most people, when they hear that, want to get up and leave. But Hebrews does not stop there.
What the writer does next is one of the most beautiful pivots in all of Scripture. The terror of verse 13 is immediately answered by the mercy of verse 14. We have a great High Priest. Jesus did not study our weakness from a distance - He inhabited it. He moved into the full weight of human experience. In the 1800s there was a priest named Father Damien who went to a Hawaiian leper colony where people were sent to disappear. He dressed their wounds. He built their coffins. For years he was a whole man ministering to broken ones and there was always a gap. Then one morning he stood to preach and said two words he had never used before "We lepers." He had contracted the disease himself. That is a picture of Jesus. He said "we lepers" about you and me. And He carried it all the way through without giving in - which means He knows the weight of your temptation better than you do, because we tap out before we ever feel the full force of it. He carried it to the other side of victory, and now He is reaching back.
That brings us to verse 16, and I want you to hear this. In the Old Testament, the throne room of God was the most terrifying address in the universe. They tied a rope around the High Priest's ankle before he went behind the veil, in case the glory of God struck him down. Nobody got in uninvited. But now now the writer says "let us therefore come boldly." That throne has been given a new name. Grace. And you have been told to come not trembling, not performing, not with your life cleaned up first but boldly, with everything you are carrying right there in your hands. Some of you have been carrying something for a long time that you have never told anyone. He already sees it. And His response to everything He sees in you is not to turn away. His response is come. Come right now. The portrait points you to the Person, and the Person is still saying the same thing He has always said to weary people who are one step from giving up - come and find mercy for what is past, and grace for what is coming.
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