Hebrews: What Happens After Death?

To briefly sum up, we each have a singular appointment with death.  After death, we will go to a place the Bible calls Hades.  If we die in a saved state, we will be in the section of Hades known as Paradise.  If we die in an unsaved state, we will be in the part of Hades which is torment.  At judgment we will leave Hades and be judged by God, and then enter either heaven or hell for eternity.… Read More Hebrews: What Happens After Death?

Hebrews: Securing An Eternal Redemption

Those “who are called” by the new covenant “may received the promised eternal inheritance” (9:15).  How does this happen?  The New Testament contains the gospel of Christ, which is how God calls everyone to himself (2 Thessalonians 2:14).  God calls for all to obey the gospel in order to avoid hell and receive “the promised eternal inheritance” of heaven (2 Thessalonians 1:7-9; 1 Peter 1:4).  One obeys the gospel by believing in Christ, repenting of one’s sins, being baptized for the forgiveness of sins, and then holding fast to the word of God as revealed in the New Testament (Mark 16:15-16; Luke 24:45-47; Acts 2:37-39; 17:30-31; 1 Corinthians 15:1-2). … Read More Hebrews: Securing An Eternal Redemption

Hebrews: The Tabernacle

Just as the Old Testament tabernacle was physical in nature, so also the worship done within its walls focused on the physical – “food and drink and various washings, regulations for the body” – that which impacted the earthly side of man, such as our senses which would be affected by the smell of the incense, the taste of the bread, the touch of the washings.  All of this would take place “until the time of reformation.”  In other words, changes in worship would be made when the old covenant was taken away and replaced with Christ’s new covenant (Hebrews 8:6-13).  Now, worship under Christianity is spiritual in nature (John 4:21-24).  It focuses on the heart (cf. Ephesians 5:19).… Read More Hebrews: The Tabernacle