In
Hebrews 4 and 5, the writer begins unpacking a glorious truth: Jesus is our
Great High Priest. Not just any priest—He’s exalted, eternal, and empathetic.
The sinless Savior who bridges Heaven and Earth and intercedes for you right
now. No other priest, no other sacrifice, no other go-between needed. You’ve
got Jesus.
But
then—bam!—the writer abruptly hits pause. He says, “I’ve got so much more to
say about this, but you’re not ready. You’re spiritually sluggish and hard of
hearing.” Ouch!
Verse
12 delivers the knockout punch: “By this time you ought to be teachers.”
Translation? You’ve been believers long enough to be leading others—but you’re
still sipping spiritual milk when you should be grilling Gospel steak.
The
Christian life is meant to grow in stages: (1) Infant faith: newly born again,
learning the basics. (2) Bottle-fed faith: nourished by foundational truths
like repentance and salvation. (3) Solid-food faith: strengthened by obedience
and applying the Word. (4) Reproducing faith: mature enough to feed others,
guide them, and multiply the Gospel. It’s a journey—from being nurtured to
becoming a nurturer. From learner to leader. From taught to teacher. From
receiver to reproducer.
But
those Hebrew Christians? Stuck in spiritual infancy. Still wearing spiritual
diapers and drinking from the baby bottle. Still needing someone to re-teach
them the basics. Imagine being told, after years in the faith, “You are still like
babies who need milk and cannot eat solid food.”
Here’s
the kicker: maturity isn’t measured by how long you’ve been a Christ follower—it’s
measured by how much you’ve grown into Christlikeness. This type of growth
leads to reproduction. Mature believers disciple others. They model godliness,
encourage the young in faith, and teach by example.
So...
are you still bottle-fed? Or are you ready to feed others? After all, you “ought
to” be a teacher by now! Wait! What?! Me, a Teacher? Yes, you and every Christ
follower are called to pass on what they have learned to others!
You
don’t need a pulpit or a seminary degree. You just need a willing heart. So,
put down the bottle and start a daily diet of being nourished by the solid-food
of God’s Word. Then ask God to show you someone to teach, guide, or encourage.
Love them. Pray with them. Serve them. And yes—teach them. By this time... you really
ought to.
Today,
may the Lord stir your heart from comfort to calling, from milk to meat, from
receiving to reproducing.
May you walk in the strength of His Word, the joy of His Gospel, and the
boldness of His Spirit.


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