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Essay / Jesus, the Son of God - 1320
Introduction: Jesus, the son of God. It is He who sent His only son to die for the sins of all men and women. It was a sacrificial type of love that rent the veil, allowing all to live in the presence of the Holy Spirit. In this New Covenant, those who accept Jesus as their Lord and Savior are forgiven for sins they have not yet committed. Because of the persecution, the second generation of Christians was tempted to return to their Judaism, to their Jewish ways, to the Jewish religion. ancient teaching of the Old Covenant. The book of Hebrews was written by an unknown author. The author wrote to Rome to remind the people that Jesus Christ is superior to all aspects of the Old Covenant. Christians must therefore be faithful to the New Covenant. Throughout the book, however, the author makes important points in his argument and warns readers. It is these warnings that the author hopes to achieve. Because of the expression of these warnings, incorporated in the author's use of Galatians and historical reconstruction, it seems evident that the warnings are intended to inscribe the possibility of failing to assure assured salvation.Paragraph 1: In the introduction of the book, the author clearly states that after Jesus had cleansed sins, he sat down at the right hand of the Majesty in heaven, and that is when he is become more superior to the angels. In fact, the angels worshiped him. This is where the author presents the first warning. (2:1-4), which addresses the supremacy of the passage, Christ over the angels. In principle, it is about not “drifting” (2:1). Those who reject the evidence and the message of salvation by endorsing a message of lower judgment found through angels will face a judgment worse than that which was... middle of paper ... he sows. Good works and productivity are evidence of genuine faith. Additionally, the author may be thinking of someone like Judas who would clearly fit his description in 6:4-6. “For it is impossible to bring back to repentance those who were once enlightened, who have experienced the good things of heaven and have shared the Holy Spirit, who have tasted the goodness of the word of God and the power of the age to come. -and who then turn away from repentance; by rejecting the Son of God, they themselves nail him once more to the cross and subject him to public ignominy” (Holy Bible, Hebrews 6:4-6). Those who have been part of a growing congregation and have also experienced the Spirit of God at work in their lives, it is said that if they give up, they are "crucifying the Son of God anew" (6:6), making it impossible for them to obtain their declared salvation.