Calvary Hill Sermons

The Better Priest

44 min · 4 mei 2026
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Beschrijving

In Hebrews 5:1–10, we are shown one of the most important categories in all of Scripture for understanding Jesus: Priest. Why did God spend centuries building the categories of prophets, kings, sacrifices, and priests before sending His Son into the world? Because Jesus cannot be rightly understood apart from the Old Testament story that prepared the world for Him. He is not merely a teacher, moral example, or spiritual guide. He is our Great High Priest. In this sermon, Pastor Neil Sandlin looks at the priest God required and the priest God provided. The Old Testament priesthood revealed what sinful people needed: a mediator appointed by God, able to sympathize with human weakness, and able to offer sacrifice for sin. But every earthly priest was limited by his own weakness and guilt. Hebrews shows us that what God required, He Himself provided in Christ. Jesus is the true and better High Priest—appointed by God, enthroned as the eternal Son, compassionate toward sinners, and the final sacrifice for sin. He is the Priest-King after the order of Melchizedek, the one who not only died for His people, but now reigns and intercedes for them forever. This sermon calls us to behold the glory of Christ as our perfect High Priest and to come to Him, because there is no other priest, no other sacrifice, and no other salvation.

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Alle afleveringen

205 afleveringen

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Priestly Perfection

What makes a person fit to stand before a holy God? Can religious rituals, good works, church membership, or human effort give us access to God’s presence? In Hebrews 7:11–19, Pastor James O'Dell discuses why the Old Covenant priesthood could never accomplish what sinners truly need. The Levitical priests, sacrifices, and law could reveal sin, but they could not remove it. They could point forward to salvation, but they could not provide it. This passage introduces us to Jesus Christ, our eternal High Priest after the order of Melchizedek. Unlike the priests of the Old Covenant, Jesus possesses an indestructible life, offers a perfect sacrifice, and provides complete access to God for all who trust in Him. Through Christ alone, sinners are forgiven, clothed in righteousness, and invited to draw near to the throne of grace with confidence. Join us as we continue our study through Hebrews and see why Jesus is the better priest, the better hope, and the only way to God.

Gisteren32 min
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The Better Priest-King

In Hebrews 7:1-10, the writer introduces us to the mysterious figure of Melchizedek—not so that we would become fascinated with Melchizedek, but so that we would see the greatness of Jesus Christ more clearly. Melchizedek appears in Genesis as both king and priest, the king of righteousness and the king of peace. Hebrews shows us that he was a God-given shadow pointing forward to Jesus, our Better Priest-King. In this sermon, Pastor Neil Sandlin discusses how Jesus brings the righteousness we could never achieve, secures the peace we could never earn, and lives forever as our eternal High Priest who never stops interceding for His people. Melchizedek was the shadow. Jesus is the substance. Melchizedek was the portrait. Jesus is the reality. Melchizedek was the signpost. Jesus is the destination.

15 jun 202644 min
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Guaranteed By God

In Hebrews 6:13–20, the writer of Hebrews reminds weary believers that God’s promises are certain because God Himself is faithful. After urging Christians to persevere with faith and patience, Hebrews points us to Abraham as an example of someone who waited on the promises of God, even when the fulfillment seemed delayed and impossible. In this sermon Pastor James O'Dell explores the certainty of God’s promise, the comfort of God’s oath, and the security believers have in Jesus Christ, our great High Priest. Because God cannot lie and His purposes are unchangeable, Christians can have strong encouragement to hold fast to the hope set before them. Our hope is not wishful thinking. It is a sure and steadfast anchor of the soul. Jesus has gone before us as our forerunner, entering behind the curtain on our behalf and securing our eternal future with God. Life is difficult, waiting is hard, and faith often requires patience. But God always keeps His promises. For all who are in Christ, our salvation is secure, our hope is anchored, and our future is certain.

8 jun 202638 min
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The Faith That Makes It Home

In Hebrews 6:9–12, the author turns from one of the strongest warnings in Scripture to a tender word of encouragement: “Beloved, we feel sure of better things—things that belong to salvation.” In this sermon Pastor Neil Sandlin explores how God uses His warnings like spiritual rumble strips and guardrails. They are not meant to drive true believers into despair, but to wake them up, keep them alert, and preserve them all the way to the end. Hebrews reminds us that spiritual drifting is dangerous. We can grow sluggish, sleepy, and inattentive to Christ. But true believers hear God’s warnings and respond. Genuine faith wakes up when God speaks, keeps going through weariness, continues loving and serving the people of God, and presses on in faith and patience until the promises are inherited. True faith is not perfect faith. It is persevering faith. The faith that makes it home is the faith that keeps following Christ until the very end.

26 mei 202638 min
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When Rain Falls But No Fruit Grows

In this sermon from Hebrews 6:4–8, Pastor Neil Sandlin walks through one of the most sobering warning passages in the Bible. This passage is not meant to teach that true believers can lose their salvation, nor is it meant to be softened until the warning disappears. Instead, Hebrews 6 shows us the danger of experiencing great covenant privileges, sitting under the truth, seeing the work of the Spirit, and living near the things of Christ while never truly belonging to Christ by faith. Using the backdrop of Israel in the wilderness and the covenant imagery of Deuteronomy, this message explores the difference between spiritual exposure and genuine salvation. The same rain can fall on two fields, but eventually the fruit reveals the nature of the soil. Hebrews 6 is not meant to drive true believers away from Christ. It is meant to keep us clinging to Christ.

18 mei 202644 min