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A LESSON MANUSCRIPT
IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT
BY
ELKE B. SPELIOPOULOS
DOWNINGTOWN, PA
HOOK
Last week, David talked to us about the first part of Hebrews 8, which discusses Jesus Christ’s
role as our High Priest and which talks about the elements of priesthood for the Israelites as
“copy and shadow of heavenly things”. As such, the promise of a new covenant was already
Today, our focus will be on how the writer of Hebrew further develops this message of
the new covenant and uses the model of the tabernacle to show the superiority of the new
covenant under Christ. Some of you traveled to Lancaster last week to see the model of the
tabernacle, but for those of you who couldn’t go, let me get you caught up – you will be needing
<Slides with video clip of tabernacle and photos of the Lancaster model>
Great, now we are all at the same level of knowledge and are ready to go. Let’s test your
1. Question: What happened when God decided it was time to move the
2. Question: Do you believe the worshipers felt great relief when their sin
had been atoned for? How did they feel two days later, when they had
3. Question: Have you ever felt that whatever you do to approach God is
BOOK
Even though we have been studying Hebrews for many weeks now, I have to say, I am
very glad we are learning more about it. Why? In my preparation for today, it was interesting to
note what Donald Guthrie points out as the reason why the letter of Hebrews has been relatively
neglected in Biblical teaching. As a student of the Old Testament, it bothered me a bit to realize
this:
It is because the argument seems obscure to those unfamiliar with the Old Testament
background… Yet it gives to our contemporary age the same message as it gave to its
original readers, an assurance of the superiority and finality of Christ and a clear insight
into the Christian interpretation of Old Testament history and forms of worship. It is no
wonder that the language of this epistle has become the language of devotion, moulding
the expression of praise and petition, for it meets the fundamental need of man; it speaks
of a way of approach and a method of worship which is superior to all others, and which
is unaffected by the march of time.1
We will see an example of just how much the writer of Hebrews uses the (beautiful, I
might add!) Old Testament to make his argument. Let’s see how he can help us understand all of
this a little bit better. Last week, a part of what David was talking about was Hebrews 8:6-7,
But as it is, Christ has obtained a ministry that is as much more excellent than the
old as the covenant he mediates is better, since it is enacted on better promises. For if that
first covenant had been faultless, there would have been no occasion to look for a second.
Today, we will continue with this idea of the new covenant a bit. As background, when the
Israelites were exiled to Babylon after the fall of Jerusalem in the sixth century BC, the prophet
Jeremiah told them that God had found fault with His people. Part of what Jeremiah spoke about
was the promise of a new covenant – so to speak a revision of the first covenant, established at
the time the Israelites left Egypt – the time of the Exodus.
The main problem was very clear to see in all the Israelites had and hadn’t done since their
departure from Egypt: they had worshiped idols – an abomination to the one God of the universe
1Donald Guthrie, New Testament Introduction, Series Taken from Jacket., 4th rev. ed., The master
reference collection (Downers Grove, Ill.: Inter-Varsity Press, 1996, c1990), 716.
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- and had not remained faithful to the covenant God had made with them through the giving of
the Law to Moses on Mount Sinai. God took notice, and after many warnings, the people were
taken away in bitter exile to Babylon. 2 Yet, God had not given up on His people, so great was
His redeeming love for them! The writer of Hebrews goes on to tell us what the prophet
Jeremiah spoke to the Israelites as a word from God Most High, which, as a bit of Bible trivia, is
the longest Old Testament quotation in the New Testament3. Let me read this promise from
Jeremiah to you:
The time is coming, declares the Lord, when I will make a new covenant with the
house of Israel and with the house of Judah It will not be like the covenant I made with
their forefathers when I took them by the hand to lead them out of Egypt, because they did
not remain faithful to my covenant, and I turned away from them, declares the Lord.
This is the covenant I will make with the house of Israel after that time, declares the Lord.
I will put my laws in their minds and write them on their hearts. I will be their God, and
they will be my people. No longer will a man teach his neighbor, or a man his brother,
saying, 'Know the Lord,' because they will all know me, from the least of them to the
greatest. For I will forgive their wickedness and will remember their sins no more.
Jeremiah concludes in verse 13: “By calling this covenant "new," he has made the
first one obsolete; and what is obsolete and aging will soon disappear.”
As we follow the historical telling of Old Testament history, we can see a bit of
fulfillment of this prophecy after the return from exile under the leadership of Nehemiah and
Ezra (and you can read about this in the books named after them). After the horrible and truly
nightmarish experience of exile, the Israelites turned from idolatry and returned to obedience to
the Lord. But, of course, that was both short-lived and also exaggerated in behavior, with much
human created tradition tacked on, as is very evident by the time of Jesus. Various religious
groups are fighting each other while under Roman occupation. I am sure you have heard of at
least some of them: Pharisees and Sadducees ring a bell? Remember the many discussions they
2D. A. Carson, New Bible Commentary : 21st Century Edition, Rev. Ed. of: The New Bible Commentary.
3rd Ed. / Edited by D. Guthrie, J.A. Motyer. 1970., 4th ed. (Leicester, England; Downers Grove, Ill., USA: Inter-
Varsity Press, 1994), Heb 8:1.
3. G. K. Beale, and D. A. Carson, eds., Commentary on the New Testament Use of the Old Testament
(Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2007), 970.
6
had with Jesus about what it meant to follow the law? And even today, this is even more obvious
in the largely secular population and smaller portion of ultra-orthodox Jews of the modern state
of Israel, founded through the hard labor of another group of returning exiles from all the
countries where Jews experienced persecution. If you go to Israel today, you will see
traditionally clad ultra-Orthodox Jewish men at the Western Wall (what you also may know as
the Wailing Wall) bobbing back and forth to show the piety of their prayers in this location,
which is the closest they can come today to where the holy of holies of the second temple stood.
Now this holy of holies already existed in the tabernacle, a precursor of the temple, called
there the most holy place. The instructions God had given Moses to build the tabernacle were
very specific. Every detail had to be followed to the exact specification. The Israelites were
moving camp from time to time as God moved ahead of them as…do you remember? Yes, pillar
of cloud by day and a pillar of fire by night. For such a people on the move, every component of
the tabernacle had to be highly portable, which explains the many pieces it was built out of. The
Levites were divided up into groups for specific tasks, outlining who would carry which piece to
the next camp site. Even the way the twelve tribes of Israel were to camp around the tabernacle
was clearly prescribed by God. I think my husband Nick as a former US Army lieutenant colonel
can appreciate the unbelievable detail in logistics God put into how His people would safely
Moses was commanded to make the tabernacle after a divinely given pattern described in
Exodus 25 and 26. What was needed for the tabernacle was collected through the free-will
offerings of the people. The tabernacle was "a moveable tent suited to the unsettled conditions of
Israel" and was "designed for manifestation of God’s presence and for his worship"4.
4. R. A. Torrey, “Tabernacle,” in The New Topical Text Book: A Scriptural Text Book for the Use of
Ministers, Teachers, and All Christian Workers (Oak Harbor, WA: Logos Research Systems, Inc., 1995, c1897).
7
In order to prepare the various items needed for the tabernacle, one Israelite, Bezaleel,
was named by God. He was divinely gifted as an artist to fashion all the many things needed.
The boards for the tabernacle were made of acacia wood and were almost 15 feet high by 2 1/3
feet wide. They were seated in silver sockets and were gold plated. The door was a curtain of
blue and purple suspended by gold rings. The covering was layered: first blue and purple
curtains, then curtains of goats' hair, another cover of rams' skins dyed red and finally the outer
layer of badgers' skins. You can be sure the tent was protected from the rare rain fall.
The interior of the tabernacle was divided into the holy place and the most holy place. In
the holy place, the table of showbread, containing twelve loaves of bread, which would be
exchanged once a week, the golden candlestick (or menorah), which was continuously lit with oil
lamps, and an incense altar, on which incense was burned generating a pleasant smell, were
placed.
The most holy place was separated from the remainder of the tabernacle by a beautifully
woven curtain. Inside of the most holy place only the High Priest was allowed once a year on
Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement. The ark of the covenant was the only content of the most
holy place, but this was the most critical element of the tabernacle. It was a gold overlaid box of
acacia wood, containing the tablets of the law, as given to Moses, Aaron’s budding rod and a jar
of manna. Above its cover, two cherubim made from gold were facing each other with their
wings outspread and touching. It was here that God dwelled with men: on the mercy seat formed
by the cherubim.
This structure was surrounded by a court spanning about 50 by 25 yards and separated
from the camp by curtains of fine linen suspended from pillars with brass sockets. Within the
courtyard, the brazen altar, the very important part for the animal sacrifices, and the laver of
brass, where the priests would wash, were placed. Once the work was completed, it was first set
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up by Moses at Mount Sinai and was anointed and consecrated with oil and purified through the
sprinkling of blood. God sanctified the structure Himself by His glory appearing over the mercy-
seat.
Josephus Flavius, a first-century Jewish historian and apologist whose works give an
important insight into first-century Judaism, described the moment when God came to reside
(202) Now God showed himself pleased with the work of the Hebrews, and did not permit their
labors to be in vain; nor did he disdain to make use of what they had made, but he came
and sojourned with them, and pitched his tabernacle in the holy house. And in the
following manner did he come to it:—(203) The sky was clear, but there was a mist over
the tabernacle only, encompassing it, but not with such a very deep and thick cloud as is
seen in the winter season, nor yet in so thin a one as men might be able to discern
anything through it; but from it there dropped a sweet dew, and such a one as showed the
presence of God to those that desired and believed it.5
The cloud of glory indicated God’s presence and, as we know, was visible as a pillar of
cloud by day and one of fire by night. When it moved, the camp moved. The Levites were in
charge of carrying the structure to the next place God designated as a resting place for His
people.
As we already saw, the tabernacle area was surrounded by a portable fence. Inside this
area, nobody but the Levites and priests were allowed to enter, with again the holy place
restricted to priests and the most holy place limited to the high priest once a year. Whatever sin
offerings were made for the Israelites, they were always just a temporary fix. Hebrews 9:7 tell
us: “But only the high priest entered the inner room, and that only once a year, and never
without blood, which he offered for himself and for the sins the people had committed in
ignorance.” To this day, when you greet a Jewish friend for Yom Kippur, or the Day of
Atonement, on which all sins are to be forgiven, you wish them that they would be “inscribed in
5Flavius Josephus and William Whiston, The Works of Josephus : Complete and Unabridged, Includes
Index. (Peabody: Hendrickson, 1996, c1987), Ant 3.201-203.
9
the book of life for another year”. Hebrews 9:9 explains that “the gifts and sacrifices being
offered were not able to clear the conscience of the worshiper”. Forgiveness was – and to
them, still is - temporary – and really, more importantly, it is a picture to give us the contrast the
What follows is what is of such great importance to us: how this temporary offering of
forgiveness became one of permanent and complete forgiveness through Christ’s work on the
11 When Christ came as high priest of the good things that are already here, he went
through the greater and more perfect tabernacle that is not man-made, that is to
say, not a part of this creation. 12 He did not enter by means of the blood of goats
and calves; but he entered the Most Holy Place once for all by his own blood, having
obtained eternal redemption. 13 The blood of goats and bulls and the ashes of a
heifer sprinkled on those who are ceremonially unclean sanctify them so that they
are outwardly clean. 14 How much more, then, will the blood of Christ, who
through the eternal Spirit offered himself unblemished to God, cleanse our
consciences from acts that lead to death, so that we may serve the living God! 15 For
this reason Christ is the mediator of a new covenant, that those who are called may
receive the promised eternal inheritance—now that he has died as a ransom to set
them free from the sins committed under the first covenant.
What the writer of Hebrews is telling us is that this system of temporary forgiveness
ended and that the arrival of Jesus Christ as not only our perfect high priest, but as God’s perfect
sacrifice, opened the door to the promised new covenant Jeremiah had spoken about. Romans
For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God, and are justified freely by his grace
through the redemption that came by Christ Jesus. God presented him as a sacrifice
of atonement, through faith in his blood.
And just how perfect was God’s plan! According to Isaiah 64:6, our own efforts could
never enable us to approach His perfect standard: “All of us have become like one who is
unclean, and all our righteous acts are like filthy rags”. To God, it was never about works or
10
outward piety; it was always about our heart attitude. Listen to how Eugene Peterson’s Bible
paraphrase The Message states God’s feelings about rote religion, as stated in Isaiah 1:11-15:
The really good news for us comes in Romans 5:6. God gives us a free offer of grace:
“You see, at just the right time, when we were still powerless, Christ died for the ungodly.”
God acted when we could not. God provided the perfect and spotless sacrificial Lamb, Jesus
Christ, whose blood would once and for all times be enough to satisfy God’s righteous
requirements. And with it comes a free offer of grace to all who would trust in this work being
the completed one, one that allows those who trust in its sufficiency to be redeemed and restored
in their relationship to our holy God. We all know Ephesians 2:8-9: “For it is by grace you
have been saved, through faith—and this not from yourselves, it is the gift of God— not by
Faith is what God requires – trust that He had done the work for us. Trust that we can do
nothing, but that with Him all things are possible through His Son Jesus. In my studies this week
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to prepare, I read this and want to share it with you because it was a profound summary to me of
Literally, “at-one-ment,” the making at one of those who have been separated. The word is used
of Christ’s dying to bring God and sinners together. Sin had separated them (Isa. 59:2)
and made them enemies (Col. 1:2); it was thus a very serious matter.... Whatever had to
be done about sin, Christ’s death did, and thus opened up salvation for sinners.6
Let me bring us to a close. The passage we looked at today shows that the theme of God
taking up His dwelling with His people is clear throughout all of Scripture, both Old Testament
and New Testament, starting with His presence in the tabernacle we have looked at and then later
in the temple Solomon built for the Lord in Jerusalem. Important to us as New Testament
believers is that we, as individual believers, have now become participants of God’s promised
new covenant through the death, burial and resurrection of His Son Jesus. At the same time, we
have become God’s residence – the Holy Spirit now indwells us as our bodies serve as His
temple. Looking to future fulfillment, ultimately God will dwell with us in the new creation
promised in Revelation 21 and 22.7 If we have trusted in Jesus’ perfect sacrifice for our
salvation, we can take great comfort that we are participants in this yet developing picture as it is
To summarize, according to Thomas Lea and David Black, Hebrews teaches us these
three things:
1. “The new covenant offered an internalization of the law. God wrote the law in the hearts
and minds of his people.
2. Christ’s covenant provided a new, direct knowledge of God.
3. The new covenant promised complete forgiveness of sin.”8
6Galaxie Software, 10,000 Sermon Illustrations (Biblical Studies Press, 2002; 2002).
7The Evangelical Theological Society, Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society Volume 38 (The Evangelical
Theological Society, 1995; 2002), 38:207.
8. Thomas D. Lea, and David Alan Black, The New Testament: Its Background and Message, 2d ed.
(Nashville, TN: Broadman & Holman Publishers, 2003), 505.
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The new covenant through Christ’s sacrifice is therefore “superior because he offered
Let me ask you a few questions to see if we have arrived at a joint understanding not just
of what God has done for us in Jesus Christ’s work as both High Priest and perfect sacrificial
offering lamb, but ultimately what type of impact this should have on each of us as we live out
Question: As a result of what you have seen, is your response one of works or one of faith?
Question: How can this faith be shared with those who are still trapped in the belief that God will
somehow find their works sufficient and good enough to accept them?
9. Ibid.
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LOOK
There are baskets going around. Please take one item out of the basket and pass it along. In the
meantime, let me ask you a few more questions about what we heard today.
1. What is the one thing that makes you glad that you are a believer
today and not a worshiper of the Israelite people? Why?
2. What does this mean for you personally – what needs to happen for
you to be a participant of the mercy poured out through Jesus’
sacrifice?
3. How has what you have learned today impacted your understanding of
God’s amazing offer of grace?
The final question will be posed as a closing – with the closing prayer:
Are you there? Have you received this in faith? If not, you may want to pray
TOOK
< Point out Chinese finger traps as a reminder in the coming weeks that the
first sacrificial system of animal sacrifices was not the permanent answer to
atonement but rather the blood of Christ that washes us white as snow if we
accept this free offer of grace. All God wants us to do is to stop pulling
through life at our own strength and trying to meet his righteous
and instead allowing Him to free us through His Holy Spirit when we push
into Him. (demonstrate freeing my fingers by pushing in). Take this with you
and let them remind you this week of sharing this amazing freedom with