![]() ![]() They will repent and make their day truly the last day. One day, maybe even in our day, the final generation will read “today” in Hebrews 4 and take it seriously. But because He ordains that our actions help bring His plan to fruition, He includes promises like Hebrews 4:6–7 in order to motivate His people to act. Ultimately, God never intended to bring history to a close in the first century. The author did not know how the people would respond, and so from his perspective the first century could have been the terminal generation.ĭoes this negate God’s sovereign plan? The answer here is also no. God sometimes acts based upon how His people respond to Him (Jer. God’s promises are often implicitly conditional. But since the final rest did not come, does that mean the author was lying when he told the first century audience that their day was the day of salvation? We might be tempted to think that He should have because the author of Hebrews told first century believers that they could enter God’s rest “today” (Heb. However, God did not bring about final Sabbath rest at that time. Thankfully, God accomplished salvation in Christ despite their hardness of heart. Israel’s hardness delayed her redemption. Jesus said that God would have gathered His people unto Himself at an earlier time if they had been so willing (Matt. After years of prophetic warnings, God had to send Israel into exile to end this idolatry.įrom our perspective, what is so sad about the story of God’s people is that redemption in Christ could have come earlier than it did. These peoples led Israel into the worship of false gods. When Israel entered the Promised Land, she disobeyed the Lord and made covenants with the Canaanites (Judg. The blessings on ancient Israel would have been greater and the curses fewer if she had obeyed the Lord in the land (Deut. Jesus offered forgiveness and eternal life to all who believe in Him, and His teaching and miracles show us the path to Eternal Salvation, if we choose to look. The anticipatory rest that Israel enjoyed in Canaan could have been much greater than it was. We know that Canaan was only a type of God’s rest because God still held out the promise of rest years later in David’s day (Heb. ![]() This rest was anticipated in Canaan, which was a type of the rest to come. The promise of entering God’s rest still remains (Heb.
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