SEVEN WAYS CHRIST IS
SUPERIOR
part 1
HEBREWS 1:2-5
Last week we read that the word the Father spoke through
the Son, Jesus Christ, is the superior word. It is superior to the word God
spoke through the Old Testament prophets. The writer made that point so that the
Jewish Christians who thought about returning to Judaism would realize their
mistake. They would otherwise trade the superior word for the inferior word.
But why is the word spoken by God through Jesus superior?
It is because Jesus himself is superior. So, the writer tells us seven things
about Jesus that make him superior to the prophets and his words superior to
theirs. And interestingly, the list alludes the Psalms, specifically Psalms 2
and 110, which were recognized as Messianic Psalms (Psalms that spoke of the
Messiah to come). Here are the seven things:
1. God appointed Jesus the
heir of all things;
2. God created all things
through the Jesus;
3. Jesus is the radiance of
the glory of God;
4. Jesus is the exact
imprint of the nature of God;
5. Jesus upholds the
universe by his word of power;
6. Jesus sat down at the
right hand of the Father; and
7. Jesus became superior to
angels and his name superior to theirs.
Heir of All Things
Jesus is the heir of all things because he will inherit
all of creation from the Father. Psalm 2 speaks of this. This is a royal Psalm,
recognizing David as king and stating that God will bless the Gentile nations
through their obedience to the Davidic king. To the King, the Father says,
starting in verse 7, “You are my Son, today I have begotten you. Ask of me and
I will make the nations your possession.” God told David he would rule the
Gentiles and this Psalm calls that promise to mind. The writer of Hebrews tells
us the promise is ultimately fulfilled in Christ.
And, really, the promise goes even further back into
history. God gave Adam the earth. He made him lord over it and he was to take
dominion over it. He said “be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth and
subdue it and have dominion over every living thing…”. (Genesis 1:28) Adam
forfeited his inheritance by following Satan rather than by God. But God
promised to take it back through another son. He told Satan that the seed or
offspring of the woman would bruise his head. (Genesis 3:15)
God continued to work and he promised Abraham and his
descendents dominion over the land of Canaan. (Genesis 17:8) God fulfilled that
promise in Christ by giving him even more, the dominion and ownership of all of
creation. He inherits all things.
The World Was Created
Through Him
Jesus’ superiority and his divinity are shown in his role
in the creation. Hebrews says “through him who created the world”. (1:2) Jesus
was not only present and existing at the time of the creation, he had a part of
it. John said “all things were made through him and without him was not any
thing made that was made”. (John 1:3) “By the word of the LORD the heavens were
made”. (Psalm 33:6) In the Greek translation, the word for “word” is “logos”.
This is the word John used in John 1 when he said “in the beginning was the
Word”. The Father desired to create the world and Jesus was the one who made it
happen, he was the personification of the word of the Father.
Colossians 1:16 says all things were created by him and
through him and for him.
His part in creation is tied to his right to inherit. The
thought here is he made everything and therefore it will all become his.
The Radiance of the Glory of
God & the Exact Imprint of His Nature
I counted this as one statement because I believe it is a
parallelism (two ways of saying the same thing). Glory is the expression of
God’s perfect and holy nature. Jesus is the exact expression of God’s nature.
The ESV uses the words “exact imprint”. The NIV says “exact representation”. An
imprint is like a stamp. The image stamped is the exact imprint of the stamp. If
you want to know the Father, know the Son. Jesus is fully God; he shows us the
nature of the Father. John said “No one has ever seen God (the Father); the
only God, who is at the Father’s side, he has made him known.” (John 1:18) 1
Timothy 6:16 says the Father dwells in unapproachable light, and no one has
ever seen or can see him”.
Jesus taught this concept to the disciples. When Thomas
asked Jesus to show them the Father, Jesus said whoever has seen him had seen
the Father for the Father was in Jesus and Jesus in the Father. (John 14:6) The
Father and the Son are both of the godhead, they are both God, both divine.
Therefore, Jesus could reveal the Father’s nature to us.
Paul also expressed this thought. In Colossians 1:15, he
said Jesus is the image of the invisible God.
You
also see here that the Son and Father are separate persons, since one reflects
the other. This is a part of Trinitarian doctrine: there are three persons yet one God.
Reflect this week on who Jesus is as revealed in these verses!
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