{"id":1332,"date":"2022-10-15T14:55:03","date_gmt":"2022-10-15T19:55:03","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/articles\/hebrews-1026-27-when-it-runs-out-bible-study\/"},"modified":"2022-10-15T14:55:03","modified_gmt":"2022-10-15T19:55:03","slug":"hebrews-1026-27-when-it-runs-out-bible-study","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/articles\/hebrews-1026-27-when-it-runs-out-bible-study\/","title":{"rendered":"Hebrews 10:26-27 &#8211; When It Runs Out &#8211; Bible study"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>Hebrews 10:26-27 When It Runs Out  When you hear a title like that, you should ask the question, &quot;When WHAT runs out?&quot;  If you are, I will tell you that I do not know for certain.  The text while very solemn is also somewhat vauge.  In the text, you can tell something has changed, somethng is missing, some- thing ran out; but the text never specifically tells us what.  My guess and supposition is that Gods grace ran out.  So I could entitled the message When Gods Grace Runs Out, but I will not.  Heb 10:26  For if we sin wilfully after that we have received the knowledge of the truth, there remaineth no more sacrifice for sins, 27  But a certain fearful looking for of judgment and fiery indignation, which shall devour the adversaries.  This is a frightening Scripture.  In my opinion, probably the 2nd most frightening text in the Bible.  It should frighten the lost. It has frightened the saved.  Lets look at it with three thoughts.  I. Solemn Warnings &#8211; This text does not have a solemn warning. It     has at least three.     A. It can run out.         1. What can run out?             a. I think the writer is telling us that grace can run                 out.             b. Those that have heard me for awhile know that I have                 to give words a definition for my small brain to                 understand them.             c. The definition I have given to grace is God working.                 (1) God working to save us.                 (2) God working to change us.                 (3) God working to help us to go right in a wrong-                      going world.         2. Two questions come to my mind:             a. What would happen if grace ran out?                 (1) We dont really know for no living human being                      has ever seen a day when Gods grace ran out                 (2) The best we can do is guess.                 (3) My guess is that some of the tools that God uses                      to work in this world would be removed.                      (a) Mercy &#8211; Mercy keeps us from being destroyed                           when we do something wrong.                      (b) Forgiveness &#8211; Is God paying for our sins so                           we can have a relationship with Him.                      (c) Kindness, compassion &#8211; Is God using good                           like a carrot to move us in the right                           direction.                      (d) Conviction &#8211; Is the shock of Gods shock                           colar when we are going the wrong                           direction.                 (4) Everything that is good from God would cease.             b. Can Gods grace really run out?                 (1) \\#26\\ says it can, at least for SOME.                 (2) That leads to the second horrible fact.     B. When it runs out, there is no hope.         1. \\#26\\ The Bible writer said it this way, &quot;there remains              no more (or no other)  sacrifice for sins.&quot;         2. That means that there is no plan B.         3. There are no &quot;do-over&quot;s, second chances, or alternate             routes; and any religion that says otherwise is just             plain lying.             a. There is no purgatory.             b. There is no reincarnation.             c. There is no soul sleep.     C. When it runs out, all that is left is a fearful, certain         judgment and fiery indignation.         1. No one alive has ever seen the kind of judgment of which             this verse speaks.         2. However, there have been some who have seen what their             friends and family experienced when grace ran out for             them.             a. Noah got to see what it was like for the whole world                 to run out of Gods grace from Gen 7-9.  In fact,                 according to \\#1Pe 3:20\\, all but eight perished in                 the flood waters.             b. The few Jews who obeyed God and surrendered to the                 Babylonians got to see grace run out for the nation                 around 586 BC.  Most of the others either died or                 carried off as slaves. (Kings, Chronicles, Jeremiah,                 and Lamenations)             c. Lot and his two daughters got to see what it was like                 when Gods grace ran out on the twin cities of Sodom                 and Gomorrah. No one else in the immediate arrival                 survived. (Gen 19)             d. But Gods grace can run out on individuals as well.                 (1) Gods grace ran out on Pharaoh. (Ex. 1-18)                      (a) The Calvinists like to use Pharaoh as an                           example of God arbitrarily damning a human                           soul, but there is no indication God did                           that.                      (b) The indication is that another hard-hearted                           sinner just continued doing what he had                           always done until God cut His grace off                           and sent him to hell.                 (2) The same thing happened to Nadab and Abihu, who                      in Leviticus 10 offered strange fire before                      the Lord; so God killed them.                 (3) We could also talk of:                      (a) Korah and his band of rebels. (Numbers 16)                      (b) Ananias and Sapphira (#Acts 5)                      (c) And many others.                 (4) I dont mean to be cold and heartless, but many                      people like to use the song from the 60s as                      their theme song, &quot;I Did It My Way,&quot; then when                      God gets fed up with their sin and turns off                      the grace, they want to call God harsh and                      cruel.  God was not harsh or cruel.  Their grace                      just ran out!         3. Of course the judgment spoken of here is not just a harsh             death.  Its a harsh damnation, and it lasts forever.             Notice the description.             a. God called it a judgment.                 (1) We have all felt some elements of Gods judgment                      in this life, but this is the judgment that one                      does not walk away from!                 (2) It is the eternal one.             b. Then it is called &quot;of fiery indignation.&quot;                 (1) I get the indignation part. God gets slandered,                      blasphemed, ignored, defamed, and defaced until                      He has had enough and turns off the grace and                      spues out His wrath.                 (2) What is puzzleing to me is that God puts the word                      fiery in front of indignation instead of                      judgment.                      (a) Anyone who knows anything about hell and the                           Lake of Fire know that is where the fire                           is!                      (b) I dont know if it means anything that God                           put the word fiery in front of indignation                           or not, but it struke me as odd.             c. The it is a certain judgment.                 (1) The fact that so few believe in a literal,                      burning hell is not a sign that we have gotten                      smarter and cast aside our religious fantasies                      and fairytales.                 (2) It is a sign we have gotten too arrogant to                      believe for that judgment is certain.             d. And the writer called it a fearful judgment.                 (1) There is no place worse than hell.                 (2) There is no place and nothing to be feared more                      than hell.                 (3) The fact that people today do not fear hell,                      does not mean hell has changed.                 (4) It simply means people have gotten more foolish.  II. \\#26\\ Specific Group     A. These verses are so abundantly clear, that we do not have to         guess either about to whom these solemn truths were directed         or why.  He 10:26  For if we sin wilfully after that we have received the knowledge of the truth.      B. Willful sin can cause Gods grace to run out, especially after         one has received understanding of truth.         1. Notice, the writer doesnt just say, &quot;after you have             received the truth,&quot; but he says, &quot;after you have             received the KNOWLEDGE of truth.&quot;             a. It is one thing to give someone truth.  It is another                 thing for them to get it, to understand it.             b. When I was a child in school, the teachers were                 forever giving out truth.  Most of it, I didnt                 understand.             c. To receive the knowledge OF the truth means, you got                 the truth and you understood what it meant.         2. This Bible passage is being directed at a very specific             group of people.             a. A group to whom God gave truth AND they understood it.             b. They got the knowledge that the truth was intended to                 give them, but they would not receive it.     C. Let me deviate for a moment:         1. Gods grace will run out for every lost person.             a. The day a lost person breaths his last breathe, grace                 runs out.             b. It does not matter what truths you have heard and what                 knowledge you did or did not gain.             c. When you die, grace runs out.             d. That is why Christians work to get the truth to every                 person on the globe and to try to help them to                 understand it.                 (1) Even this year, we are tagging doors and giving                      tracts to those we see, asking them about their                      standing with Jesus Christ.                 (2) We have done two mail outs, and I hope we will                      do a third.                 (3) We have preached three times every week inside                      the building when we could and outside of the                      building when we did not deem it safe to do so.                 (4) We Facebook the message to those who will watch                      it there and place a recorded video and audio                      of every message online for people to watch in                      the future.                 (5) We give what I think is a significant about of                      money to missions and actively seek to make                      the gospel heard around the globe.             e. These things we do because it does not matter if you                 ever heard the name of Jesus or not, the day a lost                 person breaths his last breathe, grace for him just                 ran out.             f. But that is not the person to whom these words were                 written.         2. On the opposite side, Gods grace will never run out for             the Christian.             a. I do not want to give any undue comfort to the                 backslidden, but neither do I want to distort the                 Bible.             b. Backsliders and carnal Christians should fear God,                 but they need not fear that Gods grace will run out                 for them; for it will not.                 (1) I heard part of a sermon by R.A. Torrey in which                      he said he received more questions about this                      Bible passage from disturbed Christians than                      any other.                      (a) They feared that the verses meant that even                           a Christian, if they sinned willfully after                           they had received Jesus, were damned,                           having no other sacrifice that could be                           offered for them.                      (b) Dr. Torrey wisely answered, such a belief                           cannot be true for it would create a                           contradiction with the remainder of the                           Bible.                 (2) And such it is.  We must place this truth                      alongside of the remainder of the Bible and we                      will know that Gods grace never runs out for                      Christians.             c. To the backslider, the Christian who is deliberately                 disobeying God, and to the carnal Christian, the                 Christians who will not grow out the dirt of this                 world into the light of the glorious Son:                 (1) ou should fear God for He will most certainly                      deal with your sinfulness.                 (2) That is what \\#Heb 12:5-17\\ will say to you.                 (3) God will chasten you as any loving parent with                     good sense would chasten their child, but God                      not cut grace off to you because you are His                      child.                 (4) God may send problems and hurts your way, God may                      even take you home early, but the fact that your                      home is heaven not hell is itself proof that God                      will not take His grace from you.             d. So the truth of these verses was not directed to                 either the lost world or to backslidden Christians.     D. No, these verses were directed to specific group         1. a group that the writer felt had mingled in with the             church but was lost         2. a group that had heard who Jesus was, what Jesus had             done, and even understood the message         3. a group that had that privilege because God Himself             gave it to them         4. but a group that continued to live their sinful life as             though they had not understood or ever heard that truth.         5. To that group, the writer was sending a most solemn             warning.             a. Grace can run out.             b. There is no other sacrifice.             c. All that is left is a fearful, certain future of                 judgment and fiery indignation.  III. \\#29\\ Sure Insult     A. The writer spoke of Gods fiery indignation.  God gets riled         when we insult, blaspheme, demean, deface, and defame Him.     B. Some do not understand the seriousness of willfully rejecting         what God in His grace has revealed.         1. It is a sin against Jesus.  Heb 10:29  Of how much sorer punishment, suppose ye, shall he be thought worthy, who hath trodden under foot the Son of God              a. In that time, they only walked on things that they had                 no respect for.             b. Example &#8211; dirt.             c. Dirt is so common, we think nothing of it. We just                 walk on it.             d. To reject what Jesus has done for you is to think no                 more of Him than you do of dirt.         2. It is a sin against the holy blood that He shed.  and hath counted the blood of the covenant, wherewith he was sanctified, an unholy thing              a. It is to refuse to accept the blood that Jesus shed                 for you us to consider His sacrifice a worthless act.             b. Jesus blood may mean nothing to you, but it means a                 lot to the Father, and He is the only One who counts.         3. It is a sin against the Holy Ghost who revealed it to you.  and hath done despite unto the Spirit of grace?              a. The only thing worse than standing before God having                 never heard who Jesus is will be to stand before God                 having heard who Jesus is.             b. To know who Jesus is, to understand who Jesus is, even                 to believe who Jesus is, then to reject Him will earn                 the worst place in hell when grace runs out.     C. May I suggest a course of action for you today?         1. Fear God.  You will one day soon.  Heb 10:31  It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God.          2. Believe on His Son.         3. Surrender to His Son.             a. If you have never been saved, be saved.             b. If you are a Christian, live like God commands.  And do it today, before grace runs out.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Hebrews 10:26-27 When It Runs Out When you hear a title like that, you should ask the question, &quot;When WHAT runs out?&quot; If you are, I will tell you that I do not know for certain. The text while very solemn is also somewhat vauge. In the text, you can tell something has changed, somethng &hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/articles\/hebrews-1026-27-when-it-runs-out-bible-study\/\" class=\"more-link\">Continue reading<span class=\"screen-reader-text\"> &#8220;Hebrews 10:26-27 &#8211; When It Runs Out &#8211; Bible study&#8221;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"","ping_status":"","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-1332","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-general"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/articles\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1332","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/articles\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/articles\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/articles\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/articles\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=1332"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/articles\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1332\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/articles\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=1332"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/articles\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=1332"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/articles\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=1332"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}