This sermon is part of my midweek Lenten series from the book of Hebrews.  
However, this sermon would also be a very Sunday sermon (with a few tweaks here 
and there) for Proper 16, Year C, in the LSB 3-year lectionary. 

--------------- 

Intro
After Jesus had raised Lazarus from the dead, the Jewish leadership had decided 
it was better for the people if Jesus was dead.  They said, “If we let Jesus go 
on like this, everyone will believe in him.  Then the Romans will come and 
destroy both our Temple and our nation” (John 11:48).  “So from that day on 
they plotted to kill him” (John 11:53).  

Oh, they were out for Jesus’ blood!  And soon they would have their wish.  
Soon, Jesus would be before Pilate, the Roman Governor of Judea, who would 
convict and sentence Him to death.  And so Jesus’ blood would be shed.  

Main Body
Like the first victim of murder, Abel, Jesus would also die as an innocent 
victim.  But unlike Abel, who was sinful and just a human, Jesus was sinless 
and more than a human--He was also God.  That’s why Jesus’ blood “speaks a 
better word than the blood of Abel.”  As our sermon hymn put it: “Abel’s blood 
for vengeance pleaded to the skies; but the blood of Jesus for our pardon 
cries” (LSB 433:4).  

Abel’s blood spoke from the ground to heaven, crying out for retribution.  
Jesus’ blood also speaks, but His precious blood cries--not to heaven--but from 
heaven!  His blood proclaims, not retribution and revenge, but pardon and 
forgiveness of sins.  And it is through His blood, and His blood alone, that we 
have access to God. 

The Book of Hebrews tells us about this access.  Through Jesus’ blood, we have 
access to where the worship of God is taking place in heaven.  Hebrews says 
that when we gather to worship, we “have come to Mount Zion, to the city of the 
living God, to the heavenly Jerusalem.”   Is that true?  Oh, yes!  Although our 
mortal eyes cannot see it, we are worshiping with the saints and angels in 
heaven, who are in “the heavenly Jerusalem.”  

The Old Testament Temple was atop Mount Zion.  And what was remarkable about 
the Temple?  That was where God located His presence for His people.  Of that 
Temple, God told King Solomon: “I have consecrated this Temple that you have 
built by placing my name there forever.  My eyes and my heart will always be 
there” (1 Kings 9:3). 

And so the Temple is the place of God’s presence, even today.  For God said 
that He would place His name there forever.  But that puts us in a bind, for 
the Old Testament Temple is no more.  

But we are only in a bind until we realize that even the Old Testament Temple 
pointed forward to a future fulfillment in Jesus.  In John chapter 2, Jesus 
spoke about how the Temple would be destroyed and that, in three days, it would 
be rebuilt.  When Jesus said that, He wasn’t talking about the Temple of stone 
and mortar but the Temple of His own flesh and blood.  And it is through that 
flesh-and-blood Temple of Jesus where we find God’s presence for us today.  

In the Old Covenant, God’s people went to the stone-and-mortar Temple to be in 
the presence of God.  Today, in the New Covenant, we go to the flesh-and-blood 
Temple of Jesus.  Where we get Jesus’ flesh and blood, there we find God’s 
presence!

When we gather in worship, an extraordinary event takes place: heaven 
intersects with earth.  This intersection of eternity and time, of infinity and 
our assembly, happens because we “have come to Mount Zion, to the city of the 
living God, to the heavenly Jerusalem.”   Although we are here, we are also 
there.  We are in God’s presence.  

That’s why we sing the song of angels in our Lord’s Supper liturgy.  We sing, 
“Holy, holy, holy, Lord God of Sabaoth, heaven and earth are full of thy glory” 
(LSB 195).  That’s the song Isaiah heard the angels singing when God had given 
him a vision of the heavenly Temple (Isaiah 6:1-7).  And since we join with the 
angels in their worship of God, we join them in their singing.  

But Jesus’ blood does more than join us with heaven in their worship of God.  
Jesus’ blood also makes us one with all believers in Him.  How can that not be 
if all true believers are part of this heavenly assembly?  Hebrews says that we 
have been brought into “the assembly of the Firstborn, whose names are written 
in heaven.”  The Firstborn refers to Jesus.  St. Luke lets us know that when, 
writing about Jesus’ birth, he literally wrote that Mary “gave birth to her 
son, the Firstborn” (Luke 2:7). 

In other words, we have been brought into the one, holy, catholic, and 
apostolic Church.  Now this Church is hidden to the human eye, but not to the 
Lord.  For the Lord knows who belongs to Him.  

That is why God still calls Christians to assemble.  For the Holy Spirit has 
joined us to our Lord by faith, which also makes us members of one another.  
Being joined to Jesus Christ, we are one Church because there is only one Lord. 
 That’s also why the book of Hebrews tells us not to neglect the assembling of 
ourselves together (10:25).  To avoid joining in worship is to be something 
other than who are!

The blood of Jesus gives us access to God, who is the Judge of all.  On the 
Last Day, all people will stand before the Judge of all.  No one will be able 
to hide any secrets from Him.  And He will pronounce judgment on all--and it 
will either be a verdict of condemnation or acquittal.  

Even you will not escape God’s judgment.  Some Christians think that God will 
not judge them.  But that’s not true.  As a Christian you, will be judged.  The 
only difference is that you will be found “Not Guilty” because of Jesus.  

Think about absolution, when I as your pastor speak God’s Word of forgiveness 
to you.  I do that because Jesus told the Church’s first pastors, His Apostles: 
“If you forgive the sins of any, they are forgiven” (John 20:23).  But what 
does that mean?  It means that every time you hear the word of absolution, you 
are hearing God’s verdict on you ahead of time!  

The book of Hebrews also tells us is that those who have died in the faith are 
mentors to us.  After all, we are with “the righteous, who have been made 
perfect.”  

Hebrews chapter 11 lists some of the saints who have gone before us.  It starts 
with Abel in Genesis (Hebrews 11:4).  Later, it even tells us of those who 
refused to recant their faith as described in the Old Testament Apocrypha book 
of 2nd Maccabees.  They stood firm in the faith because they looked forward to 
the resurrection of the body on the Last Day (2 Maccabees 7:1,13-14).  

Our Lutheran Confessions remind us to give thanks to God for the saints who 
have gone before us.  Through them, we can learn about how God made His grace 
known to them in their lives.  From them, we can see examples of how to live 
out the faith in many, different circumstances.  Even today, they are our 
teachers in the faith and role models for the life of good works. 

The book of Hebrews calls Jesus “the Mediator of the new covenant.”  It is as 
the Apostle Paul wrote to the young Pastor Timothy: “There is one God and one 
mediator between God and mankind--the man, Christ Jesus” (1 Timothy 2:5).  A 
mediator is a go-between.  Jesus is the One who brings us into the presence of 
His Father.  He has taken our sin into Himself, and in place of our sin, He 
gives us His perfect righteousness.  That enables us to stand before God, pure 
and faultless. 

Indeed, Jesus’ blood is “the sprinkled blood that speaks a better word than the 
blood of Abel.”  Without the shedding of blood, there is no forgiveness of 
sins” (Hebrews 9:22).  That’s why Jesus shed His blood for us on the cross--to 
give to us the forgiveness of sins.  Jesus’ blood can do that.  For when He 
shed His blood, it was not only the blood of a man, but also the blood of God. 

Did you notice that Hebrews speaks in the present tense when it mentions the 
sprinkled blood?  Now why would the book of Hebrews do that?  After all, Jesus’ 
shedding His blood for us happened in the past.  Here’s why: Although Jesus’ 
blood was shed on the cross in the past, it is now given and applied to us in 
the present.  

That’s why the book of Hebrews can speak about Jesus’ blood being applied to us 
in the present tense.  For it is.  But instead of the blood being sprinkled on 
us, as in the Old Covenant, we receive it in the Supper.      

Yes, Jesus’ blood still speaks, for you today, in the present tense!  And it 
speaks a better word than the blood of Abel.  The blood of Jesus Christ speaks 
the forgiveness of sins, life, and salvation.  That’s what Jesus gives you in 
His Supper.  

Conclusion
You don’t need to go up to the earthly city of Jerusalem to eat and drink in 
God’s presence.  Instead, whenever we gather to celebrate the Lord’s Supper, we 
enter the heavenly Jerusalem to feast there in the presence of God, the saints, 
and the angels.  On this side of heaven, it doesn’t get any better than that.  
Amen. 



--
Rich Futrell, Pastor
Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church, Kimberling City, MO
http://sothl.com 

Where we receive and confess the faith of the Church (in and with the Augsburg 
Confession): The faith once delivered to the saints, the faith of Christ Jesus, 
His Word of the Gospel, His full forgiveness of sins, His flesh and blood given 
and poured out for us, and His gracious gift of life for body, soul, and 
spirit.  

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