Within the Veil: Anchored in the Sworn Promise
Hebrews 6:13-16
"For when God made the promise to Abraham, since He could swear an oath by no one greater, He swore by Himself, saying, "indeed I will greatly bless you and I will greatly multiply you." And so, having patiently waited, he obtained the promise. For people swear an oath by one greater than themselves, and with them an oath serving as confirmation is an end of every dispute.
Here we have standing as the ultimate guarantee; God’s unbreakable self-sworn oath to Abraham, since there is none greater. No higher authority, no loophole, just the immutable character of Yahweh Himself. Becoming the living proof that God’s word does not fail.
The promise kept:
Abraham’s patient waiting and eventual obtaining of the promise in Isaac, the legitimate son, and the multiplied descendants. By his endurance he obtained the promise; not just the son, but the beginning of the multiplied seed that would explode into a nation and, ultimately, reach every nation through the singular Seed, Jesus Christ. The apostle Paul makes this crystal clear in Galatians 3:16 and again in Galatians 3:29. The legitimate son (Isaac, the child of promise, not Ishmael the child of human striving) becomes the line that carries the covenant forward; through Jacob, Judah, David…to Jesus.
This pattern of promise → testing/waiting → and obtaining through faith is what makes Hebrews 6 so encouraging. And the oath isn’t abstract; it’s attested across generations. This ties beautifully into the "cloud of witnesses" we'll see later in Hebrews 12:1.
"Therefore, since we have so great a cloud of witnesses surrounding us, let us also lay aside every encumbrance and the sin which so easily entangles us, and let us run with endurance the race that is set before us…"
The heroes of the faith in Hebrews aren’t just stories—they are eyewitnesses to God’s faithfulness who now cheer us on. Their lives confirm the reliability of the promise.
When we are asked on what grounds do we believe, we don't talk about what we feel, or hope; we talk about what we know. We talk about the cloud of witnesses found in scripture. One terrific example of this is the foundation for our creeds, Paul’s summary of the gospel he received and passed on.
1 Corinthians 15:3-8
"For I handed down to you as of first importance what I also received, that Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures, and that He was buried, and that He was raised on the third day according to the Scriptures, and that He appeared to Cephas, then to the twelve. After that He appeared to more than five hundred brothers and sisters at one time, most of whom remain until now, but some have fallen asleep; then He appeared to James, then to all the apostles; and last of all, as to one untimely born, He appeared to me also."
Paul is listing credible witnesses to settle the matter. This isn’t private vision or hearsay; it’s public, verifiable testimony. It ends every dispute, just as the human custom of oaths in Hebrews 6 does. The resurrection is the ultimate confirmation that God’s promise to Abraham (blessing to all nations through the seed) has burst forth in Christ.
The apostles proclaimed what they saw. And now we, as part of that same great cloud, wait with endurance while pointing others to the same risen Lord.
But at that end of the day the Ultimate witness is God himself. God swore by Himself, and He delivered in the greatest possible way. Abraham’s story isn’t just ancient history; it’s the template for us. We wait in hope, sometimes through long delays and severe tests, but because the same God who cannot lie has sworn it, we can stand assured that He will complete His work in us.
This is the anchor that holds for those who continue in faith. God's promises are always what we must come back to. And when we are under stress, when the pressure is on, it is good, in prayer, to remind ourselves (and God as Jacob did) about God's faithfulness to keep His promises.
The oath + the promise = a double assurance. When the pressure is on and stress threatens to pull us off course, we run back to what God has sworn by His own Name. We don’t have to generate new hope out of thin air. We remind ourselves (and yes, we remind the Lord) of His own faithfulness.
Look at the example we have in Jacob. After years of running, deception, and striving, Jacob finally comes to the place of desperate dependence. In Genesis 32:9-12, facing Esau and an army of 400 men, and so he prays:
"O God of my father Abraham and God of my father Isaac, O Lord, who said to me, 'Return to your country and to your relatives, and I will prosper you,'…Deliver me, I pray, from the hand of my brother…For You said, 'I will surely prosper you and make your descendants as the sand of the sea…'"
He doesn’t just plead for help. He quotes God’s own promises back to Him.
That's not an arrogant presumption; it’s faith facing the impossible and laying hold of the anchor for strength greater than himself. Jacob, the schemer who had spent years running and wrestling, finally comes to the end of himself on the bank of the Jabbok. It’s relational trust, not manipulation. The same God who swore by Himself to Abraham delights when His children take His promises seriously enough to pray them back to Him.
This pattern is the foundation of our Christian faith. We don’t have to manufacture strength. We run back to the sworn Word, quote it in prayer, and let the anchor of our hope (Jesus), our forerunner, hold us fast inside the veil. We hold onto the immutability of God's Word. It doesn't change. It cannot pass away.
He who promised is faithful.
So we flee to Scripture and find our salvation in that promise and we find our refuge there in that hope. Our souls are anchored in that sure and steadfast faith.
Within the veil, right there to the Father (The Eternal Love), through the Son (His Eternal Word), with the guidance of The Eternal Spirit. Rooted and grounded in that witness.
Amen 🙏🏼