9
Impossible to bring unbelievers back to repentance
Hebrews 6: 1-12
- Session: 9
- Week: 2
- Day: 2
Introduction
In this session, Hebrews chapter 6: 1-12, we focus on understanding the foundational lessons for the new believers who became spiritually dull due to persecution.
Objectives
By the end of this session, the learner will have:
- Reflected about the lessons of disciples who might have become spiritually dull because of Persecution by listing the warnings and encouragement
- Appreciated the 6 lessons for new believers
- Warned about going back in the discipleship curve or chart by giving the example of a farmer.
- Been encouraged to hold on to the journey by the power of God’s promises and His oaths.
Outline
- New believers’ foundational lessons
- Discipleship growth curve
- How to hold on to the spiritual journey
Group Study Time
Hebrews 6: 1-12
Connecting
- Gather with two or more people for a community discovery bible study session.
- Start with a heartfelt prayer, inviting God to guide and bless your understanding.
- Explore the passage by reading it at least twice, using different Bible versions if available, then retell the story together as a group.
- Reflect and share the challenges and blessings you experienced from the previous study.
Comprehending
- Who is a student or learner? What class of maturity or students are you in? What is stagnated growth or spiritual dullness? Hebrews 6: 12.
- What are the 6 lessons of a new disciple or new believer class? Hebrews 6: 1-2.
- Read Hebrews 6:1-6. What warnings are said about stagnated growth or discipleship?
- What lessons do you get of stagnated discipleship from the example of Farmer and farming given? Hebrews 6: 7-8
- How did the author encourage these students to keep maturing? Hebrews 6: 9-12.
- What does the author say about the level of being a learner (maturity)? Hebrews 5: 11-12
- Read 6: 12. How do you inherit the promises of God? Discuss
Committing
- Engage with the Bible—read, study, memorize, meditate, pray, listen, and live it out.
- List three lessons you have learnt as an agent of change that you would like to put into practice and teach others about.
- Take time and worship Jesus with the attributes revealed about Christ.
- Use the SPACEPETS model, to assist you in putting God’s word into practice. Look for:
- Sin to confess
- Promise to claim
- Attitude to change
- Command to keep
- Error to change
- Prayer to make
- Example to copy
- Truth to obey and
- Something praiseworthy
Communicating
- Identify one person you can connect with and share the valuable insights and lessons you gained from this session.
- Reach out to a new believer—either in person or by phone—and pray with them to support them through their challenges, including any concerns about attending church.
- Create a new group and guide others through this study to help them grow in their understanding.
Post Lesson Teaching Summary
Great job completing the study! Take a moment to listen to this summary to reinforce your group’s understanding of the text and ensure you’re all on the same page. We’re here to support your learning journey!
Impossible to bring unbelievers back to repentance
Hebrews 6: 1-12
Audio Summary
Hebrews 6:1-12
Context
- Urging maturity beyond basics, this section warns of the impossibility of renewing deliberate apostates to repentance while encouraging faithful believers to persevere in hope, love, and fruitfulness.
- God speaks promises requiring faith and endurance; mixing Christ with ancestral/tribal worship manifests unbelief, crucifying the Son anew.
- Contrasts thorny ground (unbelief/apostasy) with fruitful soil (salvation’s accompanying works); links to parable of the sower’s thorny/choked soil.
Press On to Maturity and Avoid Apostasy (Hebrews 6:1-12)
- Call to Maturity (vv. 1-3): Leave elementary teachings—repentance from dead works, faith toward God, baptisms, laying on of hands, resurrection of dead, eternal judgment—and press on to perfection/maturity (God permitting).
- Severe Warning: Impossible to Renew Apostates (vv. 4-8):
- Applies to those once enlightened, tasted heavenly gift, shared in Holy Spirit, tasted goodness of God’s Word and powers of coming age.
- If they fall away (deliberate, willful rejection), impossible to restore to repentance—they re-crucify the Son and hold Him to public shame.
- Land analogy: Drinks rain, produces useful crop = blessed; produces thorns/thistles = worthless, cursed, burned.
- Encouragement to the Faithful (vv. 9-12):
- Confident of better things accompanying salvation despite strong words.
- God not unjust—remembers past work, love shown by serving saints.
- Desire: Continue diligent love to full assurance of hope; avoid sluggishness.
- Imitate those inheriting promises through faith and patience/endurance.
- Apostasy Defined: Willful, knowing rejection after full experience (not ignorance/doubt); e.g., mixing Jesus with tribal gods, smearing sacrificial blood—declares Christ’s blood insufficient.
- Purpose: Reject basics-repetition and unbelief mixtures; produce salvation’s fruit through enduring faith, love, and service to inherit promises.
Application
- Move beyond elementary doctrine to maturity; reject any mixing of Christ with other powers—persevere in diligent love, faith, and hope to bear abundant fruit and secure the inheritance.