Preventing The Deadly Frost From Settling
Hebrews 7:26-27
"For it was fitting for us to have such a high priest, holy, innocent, undefiled, separated from sinners, and exalted above the heavens; who has no daily need, like those high priests, to offer up sacrifices, first for His own sins and then for the sins of the people, because He did this once for all time when He offered up Himself."
Jesus didn’t just qualify to be High Priest; He was the only One who could ever truly be. He served as the completion of what the shadowy system was foretelling. Jesus didn't enter the Holy-Of-Holies. He entered blameless into Heaven, which the temple represented. This is the breathtaking upgrade Hebrews keeps driving home. The entire Levitical system, with its tabernacle, priests, and repeated rituals, was never the destination.
But for many it became that didn't it?
For many in Israel, the shadow became the substance. The system that was meant to point them to the coming Messiah became their comfort, their identity, their security. They clung to the rituals, the temple, the priesthood, the sacrifices; and missed the One to whom it all pointed.
But whose fault is that?
What drives the people to coveting their places, people, and things? Why do the people break the laws? What moves them away from their principles?
I ask these things because the problem wasn’t ultimately in the system (which God Himself ordained as a tutor, Galatians 3:24). The problem was (and is still) in the human heart. Something is missing, or blocking what God has put in their hearts.
Whose Fault Is It?
Scripture is unflinching about it. It is our fault. Not the rituals. Not even the priests. Not "the system." We are victims of circumstance. The fault is us.
"The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately sick; who can understand it?"
(Jeremiah 17:9)
Jesus' diagnosis:
"For from within, out of the heart of man, come evil thoughts, sexual immorality, theft, murder, adultery, coveting, wickedness, deceit, sensuality, envy, slander, pride, foolishness. All these evil things come from within, and they defile a person."
(Mark 7:21-23)
People turned rituals into idols because the old covenant could not give them a new heart; only the new covenant in Christ’s blood can do that. What then drives the continuing coveting even now? Why after receiving the New Covenant have the churches reestablished Levitical-like systems?
Even born-again believers live in a fallen system that constantly advertises "places, people, and things" as sources of life. The pull toward visible success, status in the church, or security in routines remains strong. The enemy still accuses and still deceives. He still lures the people into drift, formalism, and quenching the Spirit. He takes advantage of the human tendency toward rituals, hierarchies, programs, and visible success metrics that feel safer and more manageable than walking by the unseen Spirit. We prefer systems we can maintain over daily dependence on a High Priest we cannot see.
And there's the rub, isn't it?
The unseen Priest.
The New Covenant offers bold access to an unseen throne.
This is where the battle intensifies. Everything in our fallen world trains us to trust what we can see, measure, and control. But in matters of faith, our High Priest is exalted above the heavens, unseen with natural eyes. His throne is in glory. His intercession is constant, yet silent to our ears. His blood speaks in heaven, yet we walk by faith, not by sight.
Yet this unseen Priest is not distant. He is closer than the old high priests ever were, He's dwelling in us by His Spirit. Interceding constantly, and inviting us to draw near with confidence.
The cure is not to reject all structure or visibility; God uses means, but to keep them in their place as pointers, never substitutes. Hebrews 3 tells us to exhort one another DAILY because we need to do battle against this drift DAILY. We need to "see" the unseen Priest.
Hebrews 3:12-13
"Take care, brothers, lest there be in any one of you an evil, unbelieving heart leading you to fall away from the living God. But exhort one another every day, as long as it is called ‘today,’ that none of you may be hardened by the deceitfulness of sin."
Why daily? Because the drift is daily. The flesh doesn’t take a day off. The world’s advertisements for "places, people, and things" never pause. The enemy’s accusations and subtle lures never sleep.
Sin is sneaky. It rarely announces itself as rebellion; it sneaks in as a reasonable reliance on the visible systems, the comfortable routines (this is how we've always done it), or measurable successes.
We fix your eyes on Jesus when the visible temple (or its modern equivalents) starts looking safer. The moment we stop actively beholding the unseen One, unbelief begins its slow hardening of heart. Love grows cold. Faith drifts. And when the unseen One is far enough away from our hearts, our spirit becomes filled with pride, greed, and coveting. We develop systems upon systems to protect our systems and ensure job security.
It rarely crashes in like a wave; it creeps like frost. In the wee hours of the night it settles on the ground in the still air. And it freezes the ground. And as the sun rises with the day, it melts off into a foggy mist. Confusion. Distrust. Spiritual Blindness.
It doesn’t announce itself with trumpets. It settles quietly while the world sleeps; on the heart that has stopped beholding the unseen High Priest. The very light of day becomes obscured. It’s the slow freeze. Love cooling into lukewarm drifting, the unseen Priest fading into the background while visible systems, routines, and securities quietly take center stage.
And then come the layers of protection. Systems upon systems, committees to guard the committees, job security wrapped in religious language. Order new choir robes to cover up the drift. Have another dinner. Plan another role-play. The visible machinery keeps spinning; louder, busier, more polished, precisely because the unseen reality has grown dim in the mist.
Activity substitutes for intimacy. Motion masquerades as devotion. And the once-for-all sacrifice of our holy High Priest gets pushed to the background while we frantically maintain the scaffolding.
Hebrews saw this danger clearly and warned the very people who had tasted the New Covenant:
"Therefore, holy brothers and sisters, partakers of a heavenly calling, consider Jesus, the Apostle and High Priest of our confession..."
(Hebrews 3:1)
Not "consider new programs." Not "consider better structures." Consider Jesus.
Even in our Kairos Prison Ministry there is this danger of drifting into another "event" that covers our drift instead of launching men into ongoing dependence on the living High Priest. This is why it is so scripted. We already identified the dangers of drifting and we established "riverbanks" that keep the current always flowing toward Jesus instead of pooling into comfortable routines or fabricated emotional experiences. This protects the ministry from becoming just another layer of "religious activity" that covers coldness of heart in a world of fakes.
Kairos Weekends are great mountain-top experiences, but the real fruit shows in the follow-up; prayer and share, letters, ongoing Bible study, men learning to exhort one another daily even behind bars. That’s where the New Covenant reality takes root.
When we put in the effort to exhort one another, the new hearts learn to behold the unseen One, even in the hardest of places. So we count on Jesus to keep every talk, every agape, every scripture and prayer that's shared draws us closer to Himself.
Do you know how we, in horticultural settings, combat the damaging effects of the frost?
We get up very early, just before the cold air settles on the dew, and we either move (stir) the air.
Daily dependence, daily exhortation. The movement prevents the deadly stillness.
Amen? 🙏🏼