“ADMONISHED TO HOLD FAST”
Text: Hebrews 10:23
Psalters: 292, 38, 112, 334
(Reading Sermon by Rev. Daniel Kleyn)
It
is good for us, beloved, to know what this text meant for those to whom it was
first written. The book of Hebrews was
written to Jewish Christians. They were
Jews who believed in the Lord Jesus Christ.
They believed He was the Messiah, the promised Savior Who had fulfilled
the Old Testament Scriptures. But they
were now tempted to abandon their faith in Christ, and to return to the Old
Testament. The cause of this was
persecution. These Jewish Christians
were being reproached and mocked by their fellow Jews. The unbelieving Jews said to them such things
as, “Why do you believe in Jesus Christ?
Why do you follow Him? Why do
you turn your backs on the temple and now worship God in a new way, the way
prescribed by the man Jesus? Don’t you
see that He was a failure, as was evident from the fact that His life ended in
disaster? Don’t you realize that you
are deluded and foolish to follow Christ?”
That’s the way in which they were reproached. And thus they were tempted to abandon faith in Jesus Christ.
That
was why they needed to hear the admonition of the text: “Hold fast the
profession of your faith!” Because they
were tempted to forsake Christ they had to be told: “Do not let go of what you
believe and of what you have confessed concerning Him. Do not crumble because of persecution. Stand firmly in the faith that you have
confessed concerning the Lord Jesus Christ.
And do that without wavering, without swerving one little bit to the
right or to the left. Hold fast the
profession of your faith!”
That
applies to us today as well. For we too
confess faith in the Lord Jesus Christ.
Most of us have done that publicly in the church – some recently, some
many, many years ago. We confess that
God’s Son, Who came into our flesh, Who suffered and died on the cross, and Who
is now risen and exalted to God’s right hand, is our Lord and our Savior. We believe in Him and trust in Him for all
of our salvation.
On
account of that confession, we are the objects of the hatred of the devil. There is rejoicing in heaven when one makes
that confession, but not among Satan and his evil hosts. We can therefore expect ridicule and
reproach. We can expect the same kind
of persecution that these Jewish Christians faced. Because of that, the Word of God to us is: “Hold fast to your
confession! Cling to it! Never let it go! Stand firmly in what you believe! Never let anyone or anything lead you to waver from what you have
confessed, and continue to confess, concerning the Lord Jesus Christ!” We are admonished to hold fast.
That
is our theme: “ADMONISHED TO HOLD FAST!” We consider it under the following points:
I. To What We Must Hold Fast
II. What It Means To Hold Fast
III. How We Hold Fast
I. TO WHAT WE MUST HOLD FAST
The
child of God is one who makes confession of his faith. The confession that he makes is a public
confession. It is the kind of
confession that the apostle Paul speaks of when he writes to Timothy in I
Timothy 6:12 saying, “Thou hast professed a good profession before many
witnesses.” It is a public profession
of faith.
It
is public, first of all, when it is made before the consistory. There one speaks publicly to others
concerning what he believes. And then
that profession of faith is public when it takes place before the church,
before the people of God, before fellow saints in Christ. One stands before the congregation, and one
lets the whole congregation know and hear of his confession.
But
that public profession of faith is something that also continues in the life of
the child of God. You continue
confessing Christ. You continue
confessing Him before your fellow saints, and before the world. You let others know what you believe. You let others hear your constant
confession.
This
is something we all must do. The
Scriptures make plain that a public profession of faith is something that is
required of God’s people. Our Lord
Jesus Christ in Matthew 10 speaks of the fact that those who confess Him before
men He will confess before His Father Who is in heaven. But notice those two words that Christ uses:
“before men.” Christ is saying, “You
must let others hear your confession!
You may not be ashamed of what you believe. You may not keep what you believe to yourself. You must speak of it to others!”
That
is also what Romans 10 teaches. It
speaks of the fact that we are to confess “with our mouth.” We have to say something as the people of
God. We have to say something
concerning what we believe. And we have
to do that, as I Timothy 6 points out, “before many witnesses.” We may not keep to ourselves what we believe
concerning God, and what we believe the Scriptures teach, and what we believe
is the truth as taught by the church of which we are members. We may not be silent. We must confess. We have the solemn calling and obligation as the people of God to
make a public confession of our faith.
Your
confession of faith is not simply letting others know that you
believe. Confession of faith means you
also let others know what you believe.
That
is something that is often forgotten today.
It is said by many that it doesn’t matter what you believe. But that is not true. The believer must have a knowledge of what
he believes. That is true faith. The Heidelberg Catechism teaches us that
when it states that faith is not only a certain knowledge, but also an assured
confidence. By this statement we are
taught that faith includes knowledge.
Someone who is ignorant of the Word of God and of the truth cannot
confess faith properly. One must know
what he believes.
Thus,
when someone makes a confession of faith he is saying this: “I know certain
things! I know the Scriptures. I know that the Bible is the Word of God. I know that God gave the Bible to His church
and to His people. I know that God
speaks to us in the Scriptures. And I
also know what the Bible teaches. I
know what God says. I know the Word of
God. I have knowledge. That knowledge is part of my confession of
my faith!”
This
does not mean that when someone confesses faith he knows everything –
everything there is in the Bible, everything there is to know concerning God,
and man, and Christ, and salvation, and creation, and the fall of man, and
heaven, and hell, and everything else.
One certainly must know the fundamental truths of the Word of God. That is exactly why when someone makes
public confession of faith that person comes to the consistory and the
consistory questions him concerning his knowledge of the truth. But one doesn’t know everything – he
continues to grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord and Savior, Jesus
Christ (II Peter 3:18).
The
point is, however, that knowledge is required.
Each of us who has confessed faith admitted that when we answered “yes”
to this question: “Do you acknowledge the doctrine contained in the Old and New
Testaments, and in the Articles of the Christian faith, and taught here in this
Christian Church, to be the true and complete doctrine of salvation?” We acknowledged that what is taught in the
Scriptures, and in the confessions, and in this Christian church, is the true
and complete doctrine of salvation. How
can someone say “yes” to that question if he does not know what the Scriptures
teach, and does not know that what the Confessions say is what the Scriptures
teach, and does not know that what the church preaches and teaches is what the
Word of God says? One must have
knowledge of the Word of God!
This
knowledge includes having a knowledge of what is taught in this Christian
Church. You all know that there are many,
many other churches in the world. There
are also many other churches in our country, and in the city in which we live,
as well as in neighboring cities and towns.
And most people today think that you can be in any church. They will say: “It really doesn’t matter
which one you belong to or attend. All
that matters is that you believe in Jesus Christ, and that you attend a church
somewhere that believes in Jesus Christ.
All the other truths and all the other doctrines of the Word of God are
not that important, for many of them are not salvation doctrines, or salvation
issues. Besides, we are all going to
heaven anyway, so why should it matter what we believe? All you need to do is to believe in
Jesus!” That is how many think.
But
they are seriously wrong. The sincere
child of God cannot confess faith just in any church. He cannot confess faith here in this church and then say, “But I
could just as easily have done it somewhere else. It was simply more convenient to do it here. My family is here, so I suppose this is the
best place to do it.”
No! The Word of God teaches us, and the
Confessions teach us (and especially the Belgic Confession makes that very
plain), that we have a calling as God’s people to confess our faith and to be
members of the church that is most faithful to the Word of God. We have the calling to join the church that
is distinguished by the three marks of a true church – the faithful preaching
of the Word, the exercise of Christian discipline, and the proper
administration of the sacraments. And
we must be members of the church that, when it comes to those three marks, has
them most faithfully according the Scriptures.
Many churches have those three marks, but the question is this, “Which
church is most faithful with regard to those three things?” And that is important because what we
believe, our knowledge of the truth of God, is critical with regard to our
salvation. For as Christ said, it is
the truth that sets us free. It is the
truth that saves. It is the truth that
gives comfort to the child of God. The
lie cannot and will not do that. We
need the truth.
So
the child of God who makes a confession says this first of all: “I know what I
believe.” He has the knowledge of
faith.
But
the confessing believer also has the confidence of faith. He does not simply know certain things, but
is also sure of those things. Faith is
very personal. The child of God, when
making confession of faith, does not simply express something that he knows in
his head. But he expresses something
that is true in his heart. He confesses
something that is true for him personally.
By his confession of faith he is saying, “The truths of the Word of God
that I know and believe are truths that apply to me personally. What the Bible says is true of me. What the Bible says concerning God is
something that I know personally. I
know God as my God and my Father, as the One Who is sovereign over all things
for my good. I know that. I experience that. I am sure of that. And
when the Word of God says that man is by nature totally depraved, incapable of
doing any good, inclined to all evil, I know that that’s true of me. That’s what I’m like. That’s how I am by nature, a depraved sinner
who cannot do any good of myself. I’m
lost, apart from Christ. Thus, when the
Bible says that the Lord Jesus Christ came into this world to save sinners, I
say the rest of that verse as well, ‘of whom I am chief.’ But I also believe and am confident that the
Lord Jesus Christ came into the world to die for me! For me, a sinner. He’s my
Lord. He’s my savior. He has paid the price for my sin. And I’m certain of those things. I find in those truths therefore, all my
comfort, all my peace, all my joy, and all my hope.”
So
that is what it means that one confesses faith in Christ in this church. It means that you know what the Bible
teaches. It means that you know what
the confessions teach. It means that
you know what the church teaches. And
you give your assent to that – your agreement.
You say, “I agree that what is believed and taught here in this
Christian church is true, the true word of God.” And you also have assurance concerning that, for you say, “The
Lord Jesus Christ is my Savior, and the truth concerning Him is the source of
eternal joy and happiness and peace in my soul!”
II. WHAT IT MEANS TO HOLD FAST
The
admonition of the text is, “Hold fast to that!” You are to hold fast to what you profess. You are to keep it in your possession. Be sure, as believers, to take a good hold
of that truth of the Word of God, and never depart from it. Never change with regard to it. Do not let go of it. Do not even let go of part of it – not even
a small part. Keep on believing until
your dying day what today you believe and confess to be the truth of the Word
of God!
That
is what we must do, beloved – Hold fast!
Something
is implied in that command which we could easily overlook. The fact that we are told here to hold fast
to what we believe and confess means that these are things that we already
possess. We are not told, “Go out and
get a hold of it for the very first time.”
But we are told, “Hold fast to it.”
The clear implication is, “You have it.
You have it in your possession.
It’s yours!” What the Bible
teaches and what the confessions teach and what this Christian church teaches
is something that belongs to you. It
has been given to you. It is your
property. You possess the truth that
you confess.
That
is true, beloved, because God has given it to us. It is a gift from Him.
God, as you know, uses various means to give that gift to the children
of the church. He uses parents to do
that. He uses the church itself to do
that. He uses our Christian schools and
godly school teachers to do that. Just
consider for a moment how He has used many years of instruction in catechism,
many years of instruction in the home, many years of instruction in school, and
many years of being in church and hearing the preaching as means to give the
gift of the truth to you who are His.
Because
of that you can say (as is pointed out in II Timothy 3:15): “It is from a child
that I have known the Holy Scriptures.
I’ve learned the Word of God from youth and from childhood on. I’ve been taught the Word of God. I’ve been taught what the confessions
teach. I’ve been taught what this
church believes and teaches. Through
all those means God has brought me to understand that this is what is His Word,
His truth. And God has given that to
me. It is my possession as a gift from
God. He says to me, ‘This is
yours! This is your very own!’”
What
God has given is a precious gift. It is
so, of course, because it comes from God.
That should be enough. The fact
that it comes from God should be enough to make us realize its value, so that
we cling to it.
But
it is also precious because the truth that God gives to us is saving
truth. Every part of the Scripture is
gospel. Every part of the Bible reveals
to us the Lord Jesus Christ and His saving work. It is not true, as is sometimes said, that there are only parts
of the Bible that are important, and, as regards the other parts of Scripture,
that it doesn’t matter if you believe them or do not believe them. It is not true, for example, that you can
deny creation and still believe in the sovereign grace of God in Jesus
Christ. You cannot. For every part of the Word of God is the
truth, and it belongs together as a whole as the revelation to us of God as the
God of our salvation in Christ. The
truth is, as we mentioned earlier, the truth that sets us free. The truth saves. The truth comforts us concerning our miseries and sins. The truth comforts us concerning the
troubles and afflictions of life. The
truth gives us hope of a blessed eternal life that is coming. The lie cannot comfort – it can only cause
despair. The truth alone can give
comfort.
When
you think of these things, then you realize it is no wonder that God tells us
here to hold fast and never let go of that truth. How can we let go of something that comes from God? How can we let go of something that is so
precious and so necessary for our salvation?
How can we let go of something that is the only thing in all the world
that saves and that comforts? If we let
go of it, we do that at great cost to ourselves.
So
hold fast to this gift from God. Hold
fast!
To
hold fast to this gift from God implies a number of things.
First
of all, if you are going to hold fast to it that means you should never forget
what you believe. It ought not be true
of us, beloved, that we are ignorant of the Word of God and ignorant of what
the Bible teaches. It can sometimes be
that way. We forget the things that we
have been taught in our youth. We do
not know them. We forget what our
parents have taught us. We forget what
we have learned in school. We forget
what we have learned in catechism. We
forget what we have learned through the preaching. Soon we no longer know the terminology of the Reformed
faith. We don’t know what the Scriptures
teach concerning certain truths, for we do not give much time to those
things. Oh, we did know these things in
the past – when perhaps we had to know them in catechism because we would be
tested on them. But soon after we were
tested, we forgot those things. We
don’t know them anymore.
We
also forget because we do not continue to read and study. We have to do that – Read! Read the Bible, of course. But read other good Reformed literature, too. Read the Standard Bearer.
Read the Beacon Lights. Read
other books. Do not be satisfied with
just a little understanding and a little knowledge of the truth. And do not say, as we can be tempted to say,
“I don’t have time to read,” or, “I find it too difficult to understand what I
read.” Yes, it is difficult. But we have to work at it. Otherwise we are going to forget what we
have learned. To hold fast to the
profession of our faith means this: Continue to know and to remember what you
have been taught!
Holding
fast also means continuing to learn. When
one makes confession of faith it does not mean that he now knows it all. You cannot say: “I’m finished with
catechism, and I’m finished with pre-confession class, so now I don’t have to
study much anymore.” That is not the
case. The child of God is always
learning and must always be learning.
The Scriptures are filled with truth – filled with the revelation of God
to us in Christ, and filled with the riches of the gospel. You never exhaust them. There are always new things to learn. We know that. You read through the Bible from year to year in your family
devotions or your private devotions, but every time you do so you come across
something concerning which you would say, “I’ve never read that before. I never realized the Scriptures said that.” Yes, there is always more to learn – lots,
lots more to learn.
The
confessing believer is therefore one who continues to study and learn. He does that also through attending Bible
study where believers together can learn from the Scriptures. In that way one continues to grow in the
knowledge of the things he has confessed.
And
then thirdly, to hold fast means, as the text makes very explicit, “Don’t
waver!” Don’t waver! – that has
emphasis in the text. To waver means to
lean. Someone who wavers is someone who
leans this way and then that way. He
does not have a good, solid, firm footing or foundation. He is someone who is carried about, as the
Scriptures say in Ephesians 4, by every wind of doctrine. New ideas come along and he says, “Well,
maybe that’s true. Maybe that’s better
than what I have believed and confessed.
Maybe I’ve been wrong all this time.
Maybe the Word of God and the Confessions have been wrong all this
time.” Someone who wavers is easily
deceived. He goes with the flow. He is carried along by friends and their
ideas. And the result is he
changes. He does not stand fast. He drifts from the truth.
That’s
why the Word of God emphasizes here that when it comes to holding fast to the
profession of your faith you are to do that without wavering, without
changing. Do not change in what you
believe. Do not change in how you say
the Scriptures apply to the people of God.
Do not change by saying, as so many want to say today, “The Word of God
applied differently then, when it was written, than it does today. The word of God is dated. The admonitions of the New Testament were
just for those who lived at the time, not for us.” To say that is to be carried away – to drift and to waver. Do not do that. Do not lean this way, and then that way, just because everyone
else is going in those directions and you want to go along with the crowd. Do not swerve to the right hand or to the
left. Hold fast, without wavering one
iota from the truth of the Word of God.
That
is the command of the text to all the people of God. Do you hear what Christ commands?
III. HOW WE HOLD FAST
To
do this is not easy. It never will be.
It
is difficult first of all because there is apostasy in our day. Most people are changing. And they consider us to be old
fashioned. We are, they say, behind the
times. Therefore they will criticize us
and put pressure on us to join them.
And we are tempted. For who
wants to be among the few? Who wants to
be among the few who are, for the most part, constantly criticized and
ridiculed? It is much easier to say,
“Yes, they are right. We better start
doing what they are saying we ought to be doing. We better start believing what they believe, or at least agree
that it doesn’t matter what one believes.”
Because of such persecution, the admonition is a difficult one to heed.
But
not only is it difficult, beloved, it is really impossible. We cannot do it. We cannot hold fast the profession of our faith – not on our own. We cannot because we are sinful, and we are
tempted, and we give in.
That
is why it is important to note this statement in the text: “He is faithful that
promised.” That is how we will do
it. That is what makes it possible. We will heed Christ’s command because “God
is faithful Who has promised.”
The
text is telling us that God makes promises to His people. And when we speak of the promises of God, we
must remember that the promises of God are sure. They are certain. There
is no doubt about them. God does not
make promises as we do. We make
promises, but we often break them. Not
God. He is faithful. And that is because He is the unchanging
God. This is the truth concerning Him
that is expressed in the name Jehovah.
He is the I AM. He is the God
Who is the same yesterday, today, and forever.
He never changes His mind with regard to the promises He makes. He makes a promise, and even though we make
ourselves unworthy of God keeping that promise, still He does. That we are unfaithful does not make a
difference with God. He is
faithful. When He makes a promise it
will happen.
Consider
some of the promises of God in Scripture – promises that directly relate to the
admonition we are given in our text.
There’s
the promise God makes in Hebrews 13:5.
“He has said, I will never leave thee nor forsake thee.” What a blessed promise that is. Here we are in the midst of an evil world,
tempted on every side, facing not only temptations, but many trials and a great
variety of things that make it hard for us to stand firm in the faith that we
have confessed. And what does God
say? “My people, I’m with you. I will never leave you – never. And I will never forsake you. I will be there to uphold you. I will be there to give you the strength you
need to remain steadfast in your confession.
That’s My promise. I will do
that – I will.” What a blessed promise.
Then
there’s the promise of God in Philippians 1:6.
There God’s promise is this: “I have begun a good work in you, and I
will perform it until the day of Jesus Christ.” That’s another blessed promise.
God says: “I have begun a work in you.
You didn’t begin it – I did. And
having begun it, I’m going to continue that work. I’m not going to start it and then let you do the rest. But this is My work. I’m going to continue that work. I’m going to continue it until the day of
Christ, that is, until the day that Christ returns to take you as one of His
children to be in glory.” What a
blessed promise. God is saying, “I will
do it all. I will begin the work. I will continue it. And I will finish it. I will perfect and complete what I have
begun.” And when God promises that, God
will do it. He will.
Therein
lies the possibility of our faithfulness to our confession – that God is faithful. Believe in Him, therefore. Trust in Him. Seek Him and His help daily.
Hold fast the profession of your faith, and do so without wavering. Do that in the assurance of God’s
faithfulness. Remember His blessed
promises: “I will never leave you nor forsake you. I will finish the work that I have begun. And when My work is done, I will bring you
to dwell forever in heavenly glory with Me.”
Amen.