Hebrews 4:14-5:10 · Jesus the Great High Priest
A Great High Priest
Hebrews 4:12-16
Sermon
by King Duncan
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It is not unusual for persons visualizing Christ to see him as being like themselves. The extreme of this is probably Van Gogh's painting which he called PIETA. It is a painting of Jesus and his mother. The unique characteristic of the picture is that Jesus has red hair. Obviously it is highly doubtful that Jesus had red hair. Very few people living in that part of the world do, but Van Gogh had red hair and that is how he saw Jesus. There is that natural tendency to paint Christ in our own image. Yet for most of us that is not enough.

There are times when our hearts also hunger to behold Christ high and lifted upto see him in his majesty and glory. We long to cry out with John, "Behold the Lamb who taketh away the sins of the world." Our text for the day allows us to see Christ in both roles. We see him as one who emptied himself and became as we are, and at the same time we see him as much more. We see him as our great high priest.

"Since then we have a Great High Priest," the writer of Hebrews tells us, "who has passed through the heavens, Jesus the Son of God, let us hold fast our confession." That is the Christ we would see this morning. The Christ who is like us but is also our mediator and redeemer, who sits at the right hand of the Father.

NOTICE, FIRST OF ALL, THAT CHRIST HAS WALKED WHERE WE WALK. We read, "For we have not a High Priest who is unable to sympathize with our weaknesses but one who in every respect has been tempted as we are yet without sin."

A few months ago the eyes of our country were upon Gallaudet University in Washington, D.C., where the president of that school had been defied by the students. Now that hasn't been unusual in our society over the past two decades; but this president was finally deposed for a very unusual reason. She was not deaf, and Gallaudet University serves 21,025 deaf students.

It was interesting to read about the first meeting between I. King Jordan, the 44yearold president who was chosen in the aftermath of that controversy, the Student Body President and the new Chairman of the Board of Trustees. They met to talk about the future of the school. When they came out of that meeting, the President of the Student Body turned to the new President of the University and said with tears in his eyes, "There was no interpreter." That was true because the new president, I. King Jordan, is deaf as are the students he was chosen to serve. You can appreciate the need of these young people to have someone leading their school who was like themwho shared their struggle.

After World War II, the people of Genoa, Italy commissioned an eight ton statue of Christ. Once it was finished, it was not put on a hilltop, as other statues of Christ have been. It was lowered into the depths of the bay in Genoa where a great naval battle had been fought during the Second World War and where many ships were sunk. It was a site where many sailors gave their lives. The symbolism of Christ being lowered into the deep where the bodies of those brave men rest is powerful and profound. The statue is called CHRIST OF THE DEEP. It represents what Christ has done in our behalf. He emptied himself and became as we are.

Another example. The Christian faith is growing today in Korea faster than anywhere else in the world except, perhaps, for parts of Africa. Many people have speculated as to why Christianity is growing so fast in that unlikely Asian land.

One reason may be that the Buddhist and Confucian religions, which once were dominant in Korea, both put their emphasis upon religion as mystical, speculative, and remote.

The Christian faith came into Korea with a message of involvement, a message of love, a message of compassion. The Christians started right from the beginning feeding the starving, sheltering the homeless, and teaching the illiterate. The Korean people were receptive to that kind of selfgiving religion. So the Christian community is growing by leaps and bounds in Korea today. The Korean church, of course, is simply being the selfgiving body of Christ. (1)

HE WALKED WHERE WE WALK, AND HE FOUGHT THE BATTLE WE NOW FIGHT. Christ came into a sinplagued world, a sininfected world. Never has there been a human being who has escaped a struggle with his or her lower nature. No matter how disciplined and wellintentioned we may be sin is part and parcel of the human condition, and sooner or later we bear its weight. It is part of that broken relationship between us and the Father.

I heard about a pastor who was being honored by his congregation for his humility. They presented him with a medal. Unfortunately after a while they had to take it back because he PUT IT ON and thereby revealed that he wasn't as humble as he appeared. We live in a tainted world. None of us escapes.

Steven Leacock wrote a brilliant, humorous piece about a young pastor named Melpomenus Jones. This young pastor was honest; honest in a timid sort of way. He couldn't even bring himself to tell the little white lies that are part of our normal etiquette as a society. For example, on his first pastoral call, he got along fine at first. He drank some tea, leafed through a family photograph album, and chatted pleasantly.

Then after about an hour, he stood to leave and he said, "Well, I really must be going now."

The hostess, trying to be polite, said "Oh, must you go so soon?"

Well, being totally honest, he had to admit that he really didn't have to go at that particular moment. So he sat back down. As the afternoon progressed, they went through this little ritual several times.

He would say he had to go and she would say, "Really must you?" and he would respond, "Well no. I really don't have to." After all, he began his vacation the next day. There was nothing really pressing.

Finally the husband came home. It was now late into the evening, and the husband with a tinge of sarcasm in his voice said to the pastor, "Well couldn't you just stay all night?"

The young pastor said there really wasn't any reason why he couldn't and so he did. He stayed the next day and several days afterward. He had leafed through that photograph album til his fingers were sore. Even worse he was bloated from drinking so much tea.

Finally he was so filled with tea and with boredom he became physically ill and his condition deteriorated. With a sigh he said to the host, "Now I really must be going," and he died. Well, he was honest, but this is a world that isn't ready for that kind of honesty. (2)

We live in a sininfected world, and into this world came one who was tempted in every respect as we are. He walked where we walk and he fought the battle we must fight. But there's more.

HE REVEALED FOR ALL TO SEE THE GRACIOUS LOVE OF THE FATHER. That is the blessed good news of the atonement. On the cross we see the lengths to which God would go to free his children from the power of sin and death.

Charles Turkington tells about seeing a classified ad in the newspaper during the 1960s, the time when a lot of young people were running away from home and joining communes. The ad was placed by the father of a teenaged son who had run away from home. Here's how the ad ran:

Sheldon, Come home. Stop chasing flowers and hippies. True values can be found only at home. When you're ready to come back, let me know because we rented your room. Papa (3)

Somehow that doesn't come across to me as unconditional grace.

Karl Barth was once asked what he would say if he met Adolph Hitler. This great theologian responded, "I would say to him Jesus Christ died for your sins."

This is not to make light of sin or our responsibility for sin. It is to say we have one who sympathizes with us in our sin, who understands our weaknesses, and who is able to forgive us for all our transgressions.

There is a story about two little boys who were fighting, as little boys are often prone to do. One of them yelled at the other, "I'll never speak to you again."

They went to their respective houses, but the next day they were back out playing as if nothing had happened. One of the little boys' mother asked him why they were speaking to each other now.

He responded, "Me and Johnny are good forgetters." (4)

God is a good forgetter. Christ has experienced what it is to be human, and he has conquered sin. He has made it possible for us to experience God's love and forgiveness. He has walked where we walk. He has fought the battle that we fight. He has revealed the Father's love for us.

FINALLY, HE ENABLES US TO APPROACH GOD WITH A HOLY BOLDNESSa boldness that comes not because of who we are or what we have done, but because of who He is and what he has done. We have a High Priest before the throne of God. The writer of Hebrews ends this chapter with these words: "Let us then with confidence draw near to the throne of grace that we may receive mercy and find grace to help in time of need."

There is a beautiful word in Greek that is used in Hebrews 6:20. There the writer of Hebrews calls Jesus our forerunner. In those days when a heavy ship was coming into a harbor a smaller ship would go into the harbor first, checking out the conditions: the depth, the strength of the currents, the postions of the rocks. All the hidden dangers would be revealed so that the large ship could come in safely. That little boat was the PRODROMOS, the guide, the forerunner. That is the word Hebrews uses to describe Christ. He is the one who has gone before us scouting the way. He is the one who leads us safely into the harbor.

This was brought home to me, in a beautiful way, by Scott Walker in his book, LIFE RAILS. He tells the true story of James Pierson, a friend of his who was a soldier during the Second World War. Pierson was in charge of a reconnaissance team that was sent out to survey enemy lines. On one particular mission they had to cross an American mine field before they could get over into German territory. Fortunately the mines were well marked for the American soldiers. So very carefully they made their way through the boobytrapped terrain.

Just as they were safely across the field and nearly to the German lines a machinegunner pinned them down with fire. There they were whole platoon of reconnaissance soldiers stopped dead in their tracks. As time passed they realized that their position was precarious. The German army would be advancing soon. They decided that the only thing they could do was retreat. That meant going back across the mine field.

In the meantime, while they had been pinned down, snow had been falling for it was the middle of winter. By the time the decision was made to forsake their mission and start back, enough snow had fallen to cover up the markers that denoted the placement of the mines.

The Lieutenant, thinking very quickly, drew his men together and gave them this order: "I will go first across the field. You are to follow 30 yards apart. You are to walk in my footprints. That way if I hit a mine, I alone will be killed."

That was the order: 30 yards distance between the men, walking exactly in the footprints of their leader. To make a long story short, miraculously they made it back across the mine field safely. As one surveyed that line of footprints, it looked as if only one person had made the journey. They had followed exactly in the steps of their lieutenant.

Later some engineers came to remark the placement of the mines. They discovered gazing at the footprints in the snow, that on one occasion the soldiers had stepped right across a mine. They had just barely missed setting it off. But they all got back safely because they followed in the footsteps of their leader. (5)

Is that not our hope as well? This is more than saying that Jesus is our example. He is that, but far more. He is our Great High Priest. He is our forerunner, one who has already passed through the heavens and now mediates in our behalf before the throne of God so that we might come confidently before God, that walking in his steps we might receive mercy and find grace and help in time of need.


1. Dr. Eugene Brice

2. David Redding, THE GOLDEN STRING, (Old Tappan, N.J.: Fleming H. Revell, 1988), pp. 101102.

3. MAKING DECISIONS

4. Tal D. Bonham, HUMOR GOD'S GIFT, (Nashville: Broadman Press).

5. (Philadelphia: The Westminster Press, 1987), pp. 5960.

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan