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Scripture References: (Primary Text: Hebrews 10:1-18) Matthew 5:48; Genesis 6:9; Hebrews 7:28; Exodus 12:5; John 4:34; John 4:13-14; Exodus 16; Jeremiah 31; Ezekiel 36; Romans 6-7; 1 John 3 Introduction: We’re beginning a two‑week journey through Hebrews 10, using the image of a set of scales to illustrate the gospel’s necessary equilibrium. Today we’re looking at verses 1–18—the first side of the scale—which proclaims salvation apart from works. Here the author contrasts the Old Covenant’s continual sacrifices with the once‑for‑all, perfect sacrifice of Christ. Next week, we’ll turn to verses 19–39 to see how the other side of the scale brings balance: those who have been redeemed cannot persist in deliberate sin. The gospel holds both truths together—grace that saves completely and a transformed life that bears witness to that salvation. Key Points / Exposition 1. The Law: Shadow, Not Substance (Heb 10:1-4) • The Mosaic Law (moral, ceremonial, civil) was only “a shadow of the good things to come,” incapable of perfecting worshipers. • Neither the quantity nor the quality of animal sacrifices could cleanse the conscience or remove sin. • Annual offerings served as perpetual reminders of sin, leaving both God’s justice and human hearts unsatisfied. 2. Understanding “Perfection” (Teleios) • Greek teleios appears in Heb 10 and Matt 5:48; English “perfect” can mislead. • Septuagint usage (Gen 6:9; Ex 12:5) shows teleios cannot mean morally flawless. • Likewise, in Heb 7:28 Jesus is “made teleios” (consecrated) as high priest; He was never morally deficient. • Thus, Heb 10 promises completeness in Christ, not sinless perfection in our flesh. 3. Christ, the Prepared Body (Heb 10:5-10; Ps 40) • Quoting Psalm 40, the writer reveals God never truly desired animal blood; He prepared a body for His Son. • Jesus came declaring, “Behold, I have come to do Your will” (John 4:34). • His obedience replaces all earlier sacrifices, doing away with the first covenant to establish the new. 4. The Seated High Priest (Heb 10:11-13) • OT priests stood continually—no chair in the Tabernacle—symbolizing unfinished work. • Christ offered “one sacrifice for sins forever” and sat down at God’s right hand, signifying completed atonement and royal authority. • He now waits until every enemy becomes His footstool. 5. Perfected Yet Being Sanctified (Heb 10:14) • Single offering “has perfected” (completed) believers’ standing, while we are still “being sanctified” (present process). • Balances objective completion with ongoing growth. 6. New-Covenant Assurance (Heb 10:15-18) • Where forgiveness is final, “there is no longer any offering for sin”; further sacrifices are both needless and offensive. • Believers now serve from love, not legal obligation. Major Lessons & Revelations • When God gave Israel Manna (Exodus 16), it instructed Israel of human hunger that God would satisfy and complete man. • The daily Manna was to be understood as the Law of God which would need daily attending, but the Sabbath each week pointed toward a total rest when Christ came. • Jesus’ once-for-all sacrifice fulfills God’s will, secures eternal forgiveness, and inaugurates internal transformation. • Christian life holds a tension: completed status before God and progressive sanctification in daily practice. Practical Application • Rest your conscience in Christ’s finished work; stop trying to “add sacrifices” of self-effort for acceptance. • Pursue daily sanctification—die to sin, live to righteousness—because you are already complete in Him. • Serve and give to God out of love under the new commandment, not out of ceremonial obligation.