Not Avoidance, But Radical Heart Surgery
Hebrews 9:11-12
"But when Christ appeared as a high priest of the good things having come, He entered through the greater and more perfect tabernacle, not made by hands, that is, not of this creation; and not through the blood of goats and calves, but through His own blood, He entered the holy place once for all time, having obtained eternal redemption."
What are the New Covenant ordinances? That is to say, what are the conditions of this New Covenant God had promised?
God first promised it through the prophet Jeremiah:
"...For this is the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel after those days, declares the Lord: I will put my law within them, and I will write it on their hearts. And I will be their God, and they shall be my people."
Unlike the Old Covenant (with its many external rituals, dietary laws, feast days, and repeated animal sacrifices), the New Covenant is marked by an internal heart-level transformation and grace-based relationship rather than rule-keeping for acceptance. Instead of making His law carved in stone, now The Lord writes His law on their hearts. God places His law inside believers by the Holy Spirit. This produces genuine obedience from the heart, not mere external compliance.
Why is this more genuine?
Simply put, the Old Covenant addressed the external problems, while the New Covenant addressed the heart of the matter. The Old Covenant exposed sin and provided a temporary scapegoat covering through rituals and sacrifices, but it could never change the human heart.
"For I delight in the law of God in my inner being, but I see in my members another law waging war…"
(Romans 7:22-23)
The scapegoat is turned loose into the wilderness to wander off never to be seen again. But where does the sin go? It just aimlessly wanders off. No real certain control over its consequences.
There was no final destruction of the sin, no permanent resolution, and certainly no transformation of the people’s hearts. The covering was temporary. The people would sin again, and the whole ritual would be repeated year after year.
Sin was managed, but not mastered. The root remained.
No eternal redemption obtained.
Under the New Covenant, the problem is not merely relocated, it is conquered at the root through Christ’s once-for-all sacrifice. Jesus became both the offering and the one who offered.
Hebrews 9:11-12
"He entered the holy place once for all time…having obtained eternal redemption"
Jesus is both the sacrifice and the perfect High Priest who carries His own blood into the true heavenly sanctuary. Unlike the scapegoat that wanders uncertainly, Christ’s work is decisive and complete. Sins are not just sent away, wandering around until they show up again. Now in the New Covenant they are forgiven and remembered no more.
God's covenant in Jesus Christ is no longer a coverup. Now He has a personal stake in the outcome. Now it's authentic, Spirit-empowered, and lasting. Jesus doesn’t just relocate your guilt. He eradicates it at the cross and gives you a new heart so you don’t have to be the same person anymore.
For reflection today:
Where have I been treating my sin like the old scapegoat; pushing it out of sight but not letting Christ deal with it at the root?
As a landscape designer and horticulturist who examines roots for a living, I already know what most people miss. Healthy growth is never just about the plant, although the plant (and its provider) often get the blame when it fails. But in fact, it’s mostly about the conditions into which it is planted that impacts its chances at success.
And it's not always the usual suspects; light, soil texture and structure, fertility, and moisture. Sometimes, and maybe even more often, it's outside influences that drain away the nutrients and sap energy from the plant.
In my observations I've noticed that an overhanging tree canopy can greatly influence how well a plant grows. Not just because of the shade it makes, but for many mysterious reasons. The overhanging canopy often creates a whole suite of hidden stresses that sap a plant’s energy and limit its ability to thrive. It’s rarely just one thing (like light). It’s a combination of subtle, compounding influences that drain resources and alter the environment in ways that aren’t immediately obvious.
Mature canopy trees send out extensive root systems that aggressively pull water and nutrients from the surrounding soil. If you see a canopy above you, you can be certain that you're standing on a corresponding root system. And often far beyond the so called "drip line." And so going in you have to know that understory plantings end up in a resource desert. This doesn't mean it's impossible to thrive, it must means you're going to have to commit to much more effort in order to keep them thriving. And even then, if you amend the soil or water more, the tree’s roots usually win anyhow. Like that scapegoat, you can't just toss it out there into that wilderness and forget about it.
But even if you put in the effort. You install irrigation. You cultivate the soil. And you make an effort to thin the canopy. Somehow still, things seem to languish or grow anemically.
Why?
You've done everything.
Well, again in my observations I've witnessed a warfare going on. The canopy is trying to kill off its competitors. Many trees release biochemical compounds (allelochemicals) through its roots, leaf litter, and leachates that inhibit seed germination, root growth, or nutrient uptake in other plants. They are poisoning their neighbors. And the new plants never really get started. They just live for a while in a comatose state as the tree canopy practices chemical warfare on it. The chemicals can damage root hairs, disrupt mycorrhizal fungi (the plant’s underground allies), or alter the very soil biology so that the vulnerable new plants never even gets a root out into all that cultivation you worked so hard on.
It's a lot like the heart of the sin matter.
The canopy is like our sins.
Overhanging fear, doubt, unbelief, idolatry, lusting after control and selfishness. And its effects are constantly getting in-between the soil and the new plants roots. It's blocking out the light. It's draining resources. And it's actively preventing new growth with its poisonous attributes.
And it's insidious. Because even as the life giving rains come, the life-giving water only contributes to the damage as it is polluted by the canopy filter. Delivering fresh new damaging chemicals with every raindrop. Fresh water arrives contaminated.
This is a powerful picture of how sin operates in the human heart under the canopy of the Old Covenant mindset, and why the New Covenant is so necessary.
Our "overhanging canopy", those established patterns of fear, doubt, unbelief, idolatry, lust for control, selfishness, pride, or anxiety, does far more than block light or steal resources. It wages chemical warfare on the new life the Spirit wants to plant. Its poisonous effects seep into every part of our inner soil.
Whats the remedy?
The obvious answer, don't plant under the canopy.
But has a monastic lifestyle then cured the problem of the heart?
No. The heart is still hard.
The New Covenant does something different. Jesus doesn’t just thin the canopy or add more amendments. He doesn’t merely relocate the poison. He judges the entire old root system at the cross. He removes the heart of stone poisoned by sin. He cleanses the soil completely with His own blood. And He plants His own life by the indwelling Holy Spirit. A new radical root system that is not at war with itself.
Now, the rains of grace fall on soil that has been thoroughly amended and protected. The Holy Spirit becomes both the living water and the protector of the new planting.
Amen! 🙏🏼