Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Greater

This week, I am exploring the 2nd half of Hebrews 6. There are several awe-inspiring characteristics of God in verses 13-20! The overarching theme is that God is greater! Why? Because He is God. Because unlike man and man-made things, He is unchanging and all He says and does is unchanging. Because He is truthful in all He says and promises. And because He offers a hope that is "an anchor of the soul" (6:19). 


First: the idea of God's promise and oath. 6:13 says, "...since He could swear by no one greater, he swore by Himself." When I read this verse, I can't help but smile. God knows--and points out to His people--He is greater than anyone or anything. Commentary by Marie Isaacs states that Philo, a Jewish exegete, "adds the oath taken was 'an oath benefiting God; you mark that God swears not by some other thing, for nothing is higher than He, but by Himself, who is best of all things'". 


Second: the unchageableness of the promise. If the promise that God makes is consistent with His character, then God is also unchageable and His purpose through the promise was unchaging. All that God has said cannot/will not change. And if God is sovereign and perfect, His original intent is not going to change. (Chapters 7 and 8 deal more specifically with the promise itself--I will go into more promise details next time.) 6:17 shows that God wants His people to understand His promise and to recognize that His purpose is unchanging. He is not a God of confusion, but of clarity! Because God's promise has never changed and will never change, we see that God can never lie. 


Third: 6:18--"so that by two unchageable things in which it is impossible for God to lie..." God's promise and His oath are the two things that are unchageable and because God is faithful and true, we can trust this promise. I think it is interesting that God solidifies His promise with an oath. Because He is God, He cannot lie, His word is Truth and unchaging. Shouldn't this be enough for His people? I believe that the main reason God chose to solidify His promise with an oath is to reinforce its importance. 


Fourth: a new hope. The last few verses put much emphasis on the hope that will be received due to the promise. Again showing that God is not a God of confusion--He wants His people to be certain in the hope they now have. "A hope both sure and steadfast". Like God's unchanging promise, our hope will remain sure. 

2 comments:

  1. I think you have seen ways to talk about classical attributes of God from Hebrews (this would be an interesting paper). God is immutable, impassable, eternal.

    From your previous post, Hebrews sees God as holy whose presence is dangerous for sinful finite humans (which we find in the OT as well). How we talk about the complex emotional life of God often takes great care hear.

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  2. you are beautiful no matter what they say.

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