THE SON ON THE RIGHT HAND OP GOD.
Hebrews 1: 13 - 14 But of which of the angels has He said at any time, sit on My right hand, till I make your enemies the footstool of your feet (Ps. ex.). Are they not all ministering spirits, sent forth to do service for the sake of them that shall inherit salvation?
FIRST SECTION
Hebrews 1: 4-14.
The Son of God more than the Angels.
By Andrew Murray
Sit on My right hand, till I make Your enemies the footstool of Your feet. These words we have from Psalm 110. Luther called it the chief of all the Psalms. The first verse, and the fourth about Melchizedek, contain the hidden mysteries, which we never should have understood without the exegesis ( explanation or interpretation ) of the Holy Spirit. It is from this Psalm that the expression, which is become one of the great articles of our faith, Sitting on the right hand of God, has been taken into the New Testament. Our Lord quoted the words when He taught (Matt 22: 41) how David, when he said, "YEHOVAH said to my Lord" had acknowledged that the Messiah who was to be His Son, would also be his Lord. Before Caiaphas (Matt. 26: 64) Christ spoke of Himself as "the Son of Man, sitting at the right hand of power." Mark ( 16: 19) in the narrative of the ascension, uses the words, "The Lord Jesus was received up into Heaven, and sat down at the right hand of God." At Pentecost (Acts 2: 35) Peter proved from this text that David had prophesied of the Messiah. Paul (1 Cor. 15: 25) applies the words to the final conquest of all the enemies of the Lord Jesus. And to the Ephesians (chap. 1: 20-22) he speaks of the, "working of the strength of God's might, which He wrought in Christ when He raised Him from the dead, and made Him to sit at His right hand in the Heavenlies." Our Epistle uses the expression five times. The words of David spoken through the Holy Spirit of what he could but very little have apprehended, became, through Jesus and the Apostles, the revelation of what is the highest Glory of Christ, and the greatest strength of our faith and hope.
The word suggests two thoughts. The one, that as Son of Man He is admitted to the perfect fellowship and equality with God; the other, that He is now possessor of the Divine nature, of universal authority and power. We are so familiar with the Truth, that its infinite magnificence hardly strikes us. God is a God who is, and must be, infinitely jealous of His honor: His Glory He will not give to another. When Jesus, the crucified Son of Man, takes His place at the right hand of the Majesty on High, it can only be because He is also the Son of God, because He is God. And it assures us that now the power and Dominion of God Himself are in His hands, to carry out the work of Salvation through our Redemption to its full consummation, until all His enemies have been put under His feet, and He shall deliver up the Kingdom to the Father.
When the writer quotes the words, it is with the question: Of which of the angels has He said at any time? And He gives the answer: Are they not all ministering spirits sent forth to do service for them who shall be heirs to Salvation? He would impress deep upon us the thought that angels, though they come from God's Throne, and are the instruments of His power, are still infinitely distinct from the Son. The Redemption from sin, the true fellowship with God, the Life and the Love of God they cannot communicate. It is the Son, sitting at the right hand of God, acting in the power of God, to whom we must look for the everlasting Redemption, for the true inward deliverance from sin, for the complete working of our Salvation. The angels, by contrast, all pointed us to the Son, seated as Man on the Throne, in proof of, and to impart, that perfect restoration to the fellowship/intimacy of the Most High in the Most Holy Place.
This is the Son in whom God speaks to us. The word, Sit on My right hand, is spoken in our hearing and in our behalf. In that word we have concentrated all God's speaking. See, He says, how I have exalted Him, your Brother, your Surety, your Head, to my right hand, in token of My perfect acceptance of His work; your perfect admittance to My presence and the enjoyment of all the power of the Heavenly Life; your full participation, in your inmost being, of what the Kingdom of Heaven is. Sit on My right hand: let the Word enter and master all our heart and life. I have said that it occurs five times in the Epistle. Compare these passages, and the others having reference to Christ's place in Heaven (see Ref. 1: 3), and observe how the great Truth we are to learn is this: the Knowledge of Jesus as having entered Heaven for us, and taken us in union with Himself into a Heavenly Life, is what will deliver the Christian from all that is low and feeble, and lift him to a life of joy and strength. To gaze upon the Heavenly Christ in the Father's presence, to whom all things are subject, will transform us into Heavenly Christians, dwelling all the day in God's presence, and overcoming every enemy. Yes, my Redeemer, seated at God's right hand--- if I only know Him aright and Trust Him as able to save completely He will make me more than conqueror.
If we would obtain this Blessed Knowledge of our Lord, and the Blessed Life in the experience of His power, Scripture has a prayer for us (Eph. 1:17-22), that we will do well to pray often: "That the God of our Lord Jesus would give us the Spirit of Wisdom and Revelation, that we may know what is the exceeding greatness of His power to us-ward who believe, according to that working of the strength of His might which He wrought in Christ, when He made Him to sit at His right hand in the Heavenlies". Let us pray for this spirit of Divine illumination; let us study and adore the strength of God's might that lifted Him to the Throne; and let us believe joyfully, that that power works in us every day to lift us up and enable us to live as those who are seated with Him in the Heavenlies. And let us sing without ceasing: Praised be God for such a Savior!
1. "Now the chief point Is this: We have such an High Priest who sat down on the right hand of the Throne of the Majesty on High" ( 8: 1). Yes, this is the chief point: Jesus in Heaven, keeping it open for me, drawing me to enter into the Holiest, and keeping me in it: sending Heaven into my heart.
2. "He that descended is the same also that ascended far above all the heavens, that He might fill all things." On earth everything is limited by space, time and matter, in Heaven all Is In a Divine, all-pervading power. As the light of the sun pervades all the air, the Light and Spirit of Heaven can fill all our heart. The Heavenly Christ fills all things.
3. See how they worship Him who sits on the Throne in Heaven (Rev. 5: 8-14, 7: 9-12), and let every thought of Jesus on the Throne lead to worship. It was as, during ten days, the disciples worshiped Him that had just sat down on the right hand of God, that they were filled with the Holy Ghost. The Pentecostal gift is ours: here is the place and the posture in which we shall enter into its full experience.
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