Hebrews 4:14-5:10 · Jesus the Great High Priest
A Sympathetic High Priest
Hebrews 4:14-16; 5:7-9
Sermon
by Mark Ellingsen
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Whoever wrote this sermon (it is not likely that it was Paul, since its style is different from other books written by Paul) was addressing a group of Jewish Christians. But what he has to say is for us, especially at this time when we remember Christ’s death:      

Since then we have a great high priest who passed through the heavens, Jesus, the Son of God, let us hold fast to our confession. For we do not have a high priest who is unable to sympathize with our weaknesses, but we have one who in every respect has been tested... (4:14-15)

Yes, we have a great high priest who passed through the heavens. Jesus, the high priest who performed the greatest of all sacrifices, offered himself on the cross to die for us. We all knew that. This is what Good Friday is all about.

And we also knew that Jesus’ high priestly work was vindicated on Easter, that he passed through the clouds in victory when he ascended into heaven. But the idea that he sympathizes with our weaknesses, that he was tested, that doesn’t go down quite as easily for us. It’s not very American. We’ve previously noted that, according to a 2008 poll by Baylor University, more than half of us (52%) believe in a god who is either all-powerful and authoritative or distant. A god like that would not be tested. Our lesson which says that Jesus was tested is about Jesus’ humanity, not his status as Son of God! Really?   

What does it mean to say that Jesus is two natures, but one person? The famous ancient African theologian Origen provides a helpful image. He suggests we think of Jesus’ divinity and humanity as fire and iron (two substances) which become one burning iron.[1]   

Think about this image. If you have a burning iron, what happens to the fire happens to the iron. Throw water on one, the other gets doused. Try to touch one, you touch them both.

Well the man Jesus suffered. That means the Son of God suffered too. God suffered too!

But that goes against the grain of the all-powerful god in whom Americans believe. That is exactly the point.

Famed Christian Martyr Dietrich Bonhoeffer, a man who was killed for trying to stop Hitler’s atrocities, firmly believed in a suffering god. It was a teaching that distinguishes Christianity from other religions he claimed:

Here is the decisive difference between Christianity and all religions. Man’s religiosity makes him look in distress to the power of God in the world. God is the deus ex machina [the God of the machine who intervenes in the action].

The Bible directs man to God’s powerlessness and suffering; only the suffering God can help... [This] opens up a way of seeing the God of the Bible, Who wins power and space in the world by His weakness.[2]    

How are God’s suffering and weakness helpful for God to gain power in the world? What good is a weak God?

The framer of Black Liberation Theology James Cone, who also teaches that God suffers, helps us understand these issues. He wrote:

In Christ God enters human affairs and takes sides with the oppressed. Their suffering becomes his; their despair, divine despair. Through Christ the poor are offered freedom now to rebel against that which makes them other than human.[3] 

A suffering God is one who identifies with our suffering. He suffers with those who are suffering, does not just express empathy or regret. Cone says that this makes the suffering and despair that the poor and oppressed endure divine! The suffering and the despair have meaning. The ancient theologian Archelaus said that the suffering god endures in Christ relieves us of having to “to suffer any pain to no purpose.”[4] If it’s divine suffering you and I experience, it must have a purpose.

This is the space, this is the power God creates for Himself by suffering in Jesus Christ. This suffering God’s place is not in heaven, but is right beside you and me in the hurts of life. And that is a powerful place. Think how life works. The people in your life whom you can most lean on are ones who have been there with us or have experienced something like we have. The grieving feel they can best relate to someone else who has lost a loved one. Somebody who’s lost as job gets more comfort and understanding from someone who lost a job too, especially if it’s with the same employer. The addict relates best to another addict, the war vet with a war vet.

Now that is who God is. In Jesus Christ, he has related Himself to us in our trials and struggles with sin. God has experienced your and my weaknesses, he knows what it’s like to suffer, he knows what it’s like to feel worthless and abandoned, he knows what it’s like to face death. Remember when Bill Clinton was president, and with his southern accent he would tell us he could “feel our pain.” Well, God is not like Bill Clinton, from a distance feeling your pain. No, God is like the loving parent who hurts when her child is crying, the widow comforting another widow, the close friend or war buddy who’s been there with you in the fears and suffering, all of them reflecting what God is always doing for you and me. And that is power. The people in your life who have been there with you have extraordinary influence and impact on your life, right? That’s what Dietrich Bonhoeffer meant when he said that God wins power by his weakness.     

And yet it is not power that God in Christ wants on the cross. Just like those who suffer with us become vulnerable with us, don’t act like they have all the answers since they are struggling with us, that’s the way God operates according to Martin Luther. God comes to console us. Luther once wrote:  

Therefore the apostle also introduces Christ here more as a priest than as a lord and judge, in order that he may console those who are frightened.[5]

An appreciation that you have someone in your life (God in Christ) who has and will again go to the mat for you overcomes a lot of fear, gets you ready to face life. That is why our lesson says that we can now approach the throne of grace, relate to God, with boldness (4:16). This alleviation of fear also results in happiness. Again Luther puts it well:

Therefore a Christian, as a child of God, must always rejoice, always sing, fear nothing, always be free from care, and always glory in God.[6]

How does a God who suffers with us make a difference? What is the outcome for daily life of this joy? This joy leads to gratitude and a hope that conquers all the uncertainty, the suffering, the sadness we are enduring in life. Again Martin Luther helps us see the matter more clearly:

We do not preach about the passion in order for people to become ingrates; but rather that they recognize our heavenly Father’s great love for humankind and his son our Lord Jesus Christ... For he who believes with his whole heart that Christ suffered for him will not be a thankless rogue, but will with his whole being be grateful to Christ. If someone came to my rescue in an emergency, when death threatened by fire or water, I would have to be a wretch not to feel grateful toward him.[7] 

Filled with this kind of gratitude, no matter how bad things look, Christians see Jesus on the cross and gratefully see God suffer for them, both on Easter and in the tragedies of their own lives. But we Christians also know that Easter is coming. We have hope buoyed by our sympathetic God that things will be all right in the long run. Dietrich Bonhoeffer beautifully reminds us of this realistic hope. As he put it:

Where there is still hope, there is no defeat; there may be every kind of weakness, much clamor and complaining, much anxious shouting; nevertheless, because hope is present, the victory has already been won.[8]

The cross, an awareness that God is in the trenches with you, suffering with you — does not guarantee a life without hassles — a life without tragedy. (Bonhoeffer after all met death.) But with the knowledge that God in Christ is right there with you, you have the hope you need to struggle against the injustice, and that hope and gratitude is all you need (as it is said in the black church) “to keep on keep’in on.” And when that happens, Bonhoeffer and Easter remind us on this Friday that it is really Good — the victory is already won! 


[1] “Origen, On First Principles,” in Ante-Nicene Fathers, Vol.4, eds. Alexander Roberts and James Donaldson, p.283. This is a view of Lutheranism; see Formula of Concord, Solid Declaration (1577), in The Book of Concord, eds. Robert Kolb and Timothy J. Wengert, p.619. This image is typical of ancient Alexandrian Christology. Preachers from traditions with an Antiochene Christology, not believing that what happens to Christ’s humanity does not impact his divinity, may want to focus the sermon on how Jesus’ human nature can empathize with our suffering.

[2] Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Letters and Papers from Prison, ed. Eberhard Bethge (New York: Macmillan, 1968),p.188.

[3] James Cone, Risks of Faith: The Emergence of a Black Theology of Liberation, 1968-1998 (Boston: Beacon, 1999), p.8.

[4] Archelaus, The Disputation With Manes, in Ante-Nicene Fathers, Vol.6, eds. Alexander Roberts and James Donaldson (2nd print.; Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 1995), p.217.

[5] Martin Luther, “Lectures on Hebrews” (1517-1518), in Luther’s Works, Vol.29, p.167.

[6] Ibid., p.177.

[7] Martin Luther, “Good Friday House Postil Sermon” (1533), in The Complete Sermons of Martin Luther, Vol.5, ed. Eugene Klug, pp.473-474.

[8] Dietrich Bonhoeffer, “The Secret of Suffering’ (1538), in A Testament To Freedom, eds. Geffrey B. Kelly and F. Burton Nelson (New York: Harper San Francisco, 1990), p.307

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., A Rebellious Faith: Cycle B sermons for Lent & Easter based on the second lesson texts, by Mark Ellingsen