Why Jesus’ Body Is Called the Veil: Hebrews 10:19-20 Explained episode artwork

EPISODE · Mar 16, 2026 · 41 MIN

Why Jesus’ Body Is Called the Veil: Hebrews 10:19-20 Explained

from Scott LaPierre Ministries

Why Jesus’ body is called the veil is one of the most beautiful truths in Hebrews 10:19–20, because it explains how sinners like us can enter God’s presence with confidence through the torn flesh and shed blood of Christ. For centuries, the Old Testament taught distance, separation, and holy fear. But in Jesus, the barrier has been removed, and the way to the Father has been opened. If you read the Old Testament carefully, you see a repeated message: sinful people cannot approach a holy God casually. Nadab and Abihu died when they offered unauthorized fire. The men of Beth Shemesh were judged for treating the ark irreverently. Uzzah died when he touched the ark. At Mount Sinai, the people were warned not to come near lest they perish. Then, in the tabernacle and temple, room after room and curtain after curtain reinforced the same lesson: stay back. But Hebrews 10 announces something shocking. Instead of staying back, believers are told to draw near. Instead of trembling outside, we are invited to enter with confidence. That dramatic change is possible because Jesus Christ has done what the old sacrifices, priests, and covenant could never accomplish. https://youtu.be/WgfVQlm-15k Table of contentsJesus Is Better Than the Old Testament SacrificesThe Holy Place and the Most Holy PlaceWhy This Truth Is Easy to Take for GrantedEsther Helps Us Feel the Weight of This PrivilegeWhy Jesus’ Body Is Called the Veil1. Jesus’ Body and the Veil Provide the Way to God’s Presence2. Jesus’ Body and the Veil Hide and Reveal the Father3. Jesus’ Body and the Veil Join Deity and Humanity4. Jesus’ Body and the Veil Were Obstacles While Whole5. Jesus’ Body and the Veil Were Torn Once6. Jesus’ Body and the Veil Were Torn by God the FatherThe Barrier Has Been RemovedTwo Responses to This Truth Jesus Is Better Than the Old Testament Sacrifices To understand Hebrews 10:19–20, we need the surrounding context. Hebrews 10:4 says it is impossible for the blood of bulls and goats to take away sins. The old sacrifices were never meant to remove sin permanently. They covered sin temporarily until Christ came. That is why John the Baptist declared, “Behold, the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world!” The old sacrifices were good in their appointed place, but Jesus is better. They covered sin. He takes sin away. Hebrews 10:11 also says that the priests stood daily, offering the same sacrifices repeatedly. Their work was never finished. The repetition proved the system's insufficiency. But Hebrews 10:12 says that when Christ had offered a single sacrifice for sins for all time, He sat down at the right hand of God. Unlike the old priests, Jesus sat down because His work was complete. Then Hebrews 10:18 adds, “Where there is forgiveness of these, there is no longer any offering for sin.” Once sin has truly been forgiven, no further sacrifice is needed. Christ accomplished fully and forever what the old covenant only pictured. The Holy Place and the Most Holy Place The temple contained two main rooms. The first was the Holy Place, where only the priests could enter. Beyond that was the Most Holy Place, where the ark of the covenant was located and where God’s presence was uniquely associated. Only the high priest could enter there, and only once a year on the Day of Atonement. That arrangement preached a clear message. God is holy. Man is sinful. Access is restricted. So when Hebrews 10:19 says, “Therefore, brothers, since we have confidence to enter the holy places by the blood of Jesus,” the language is astonishing. The “holy places” refer to the true presence of God. The writer is not telling believers to physically enter a temple structure. He is telling us that through Christ, we now have spiritual access to God Himself. The reason is simple and glorious: the sin that kept people out of God’s presence has been dealt with by Jesus. Why This Truth Is Easy to Take for Granted One danger for believers is familiarity. We hear about prayer, grace, and access to God so often that we can stop being amazed by them. We forget how extraordinary this privilege really is. Old Testament saints lived with visible reminders that God’s presence was not to be approached casually. Boundaries existed everywhere. But in Christ, the believer has a privilege that would have sounded astonishing under the old covenant: confident access to the living God. That should humble us, comfort us, and fill us with gratitude. Esther Helps Us Feel the Weight of This Privilege One helpful illustration comes from the book of Esther. Esther had to approach the king on behalf of her people, even though doing so uninvited could cost her life. She said, “I will go to the king, though it is against the law, and if I perish, I perish.” Even though she was queen, she still approached with fear and reverence. And if that was true of entering the presence of an earthly king, how much more serious should it be to enter the presence of God? Yet Hebrews 10:19 says believers have confidence to enter. That is the wonder of the gospel. Because of Jesus, we can come to the King not with presumption, but with humble boldness. Why Jesus’ Body Is Called the Veil Hebrews 10:20 says that Jesus opened for us “the new and living way… through the curtain, that is, through his flesh.” This is the heart of the passage. The curtain, or veil, is presented as a picture of Christ’s body. This does not mean Jesus was literally the veil. It means the veil was a type, a foreshadowing, of Him. Just as many Old Testament realities pointed forward to Christ, so the temple veil pointed forward to His flesh and His saving work. The rest of the passage becomes richer when we see the parallels. 1. Jesus’ Body and the Veil Provide the Way to God’s Presence Hebrews 10:20 calls this a “new and living way.” That language should immediately remind us of John 14:6, where Jesus said, “I am the way, and the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.” In the early church, Christianity was even called “the Way.” That title reflects the truth that Jesus is not merely one guide among many. He is the only path to the Father. This way is “new” because it belongs to the new covenant and is superior to the old covenant system. It is also “living” because it is bound up with a risen Savior. Christ was slain, yet He lives. His death opened the way, and His resurrection guarantees that the way remains open. 2. Jesus’ Body and the Veil Hide and Reveal the Father The veil both concealed and revealed. On the one hand, it hid the Most Holy Place from ordinary sight and blocked free access to God’s presence. On the other hand, it was the very boundary through which the high priest passed in order to enter that presence. Jesus does the same. He says in John 14:6, “No one comes to the Father except through me.” That means He is the exclusive access point. No one bypasses Him. Yet Jesus also reveals the Father. He said, “Whoever has seen me has seen the Father.” Colossians 1:15 says He is the image of the invisible God. So just like the veil, Christ both conceals and reveals. He blocks every false way to God while opening the only true way. 3. Jesus’ Body and the Veil Join Deity and Humanity On one side of the veil was the symbolic place of God’s presence. On the other side stood humanity in all its need. In that sense, the veil marked the meeting point between divine holiness and human need. That makes it a striking picture of the incarnation. In Christ, deity and humanity are joined in one person. He is fully God and fully man. He is not part God and part man, but truly both. Perhaps no Old Testament type makes this point more vividly. The veil stood where God’s holy presence and man’s desperate need met. Jesus is the true and greater fulfillment of that picture. 4. Jesus’ Body and the Veil Were Obstacles While Whole Hebrews 10:19 says we enter by the blood of Jesus. That is important. It does not say we enter by the example of Jesus, the teaching of Jesus, or merely the life of Jesus. We enter by His blood. That does not diminish His perfect life. His sinless life qualified Him to be the spotless Lamb. But it was His sacrificial death that opened access to God. In this sense, as long as the veil remained whole, it was a barrier. Likewise, as long as Christ’s flesh had not been given up in death, the way had not yet been opened in its fullness. But when His body was torn at the cross, the barrier was removed. That means two errors must be rejected. First, no one should say, “I am too sinful to come to God,” if he comes through Christ in repentance and faith. Second, no one should say, “I can come to God because I am good.” Our access rests entirely on the blood of Jesus. 5. Jesus’ Body and the Veil Were Torn Once When the high priest passed through the veil on the Day of Atonement, the opening was temporary. The veil closed again. The message remained the same: the way is still not open. But when the temple veil was torn at Christ’s death, it was torn once for all. The barrier was not simply moved aside for a moment. It was decisively opened. Hebrews 9 says Christ appeared once to put away sin by the sacrifice of Himself. He was once offered to bear the sins of many. Just as the veil did not need to be torn repeatedly, Christ does not need to be crucified repeatedly. His sacrifice is final, complete, and sufficient forever. 6. Jesus’ Body and the Veil Were Torn by God the Father Matthew 27:51 says the veil was torn from top to bottom. That detail matters. It shows that God did it. This was not ultimately man’s work but heaven’s declaration. And the same is true at the cross. Isaiah 53 says Christ was smitten by God and that it was the will of the Lord to crush Him. Acts 2 says Jesus was delivered up according to the definite plan and foreknowledge of God. ...

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Why Jesus’ Body Is Called the Veil: Hebrews 10:19-20 Explained

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Why Jesus’ body is called the veil is one of the most beautiful truths in Hebrews 10:19–20, because it explains how sinners like us can enter God’s presence with confidence through the torn flesh and shed blood of Christ. For centuries, the Old...

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