Hebrews 4:14-5:10 · Jesus the Great High Priest
Filling the Job Description
Hebrews 5:1-10
Sermon
by Patrick J. Rooney
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It was probably one of the most difficult and certainly one of the most embarrassing moments of my life. I had gone for a job interview, a job I needed very much. Fresh out on the street following college, I was filled with all the expectations of a new graduate, believing that I could conquer the world if I but raised my banner high into the heavens. The job was a good one, at a place that would have given me a big leg up in the market. I was excited, thrilled to receive an invitation to interview. Impressive men with well-cut suits sat across the table from me. Questions were asked and answered and everything seemed to be going well — until they pushed that job description across the table to me. Reading it caused me to go into some form of shock. I did not understand much of what they were asking of me in this position. In all honesty, looking back on it now, I didn't even understand much of what was written in the job description. I was in deeper than I knew and I realized that no amount of quick stepping on my part was going to get me out of it. I had two choices. I could try to fake it or quit while I was ahead. I handed back the job description and, with profuse apologies, told the interview committee the honest truth — that this job was way beyond my capabilities and that I could not fulfill the expectations of the job description. Chastened, but summoning what dignity I could, I left the room. And from that day to this, job descriptions, for whatever type of work, have always had the ability to send a small shiver down my spine.

It is a form of job description that the preacher of Hebrews lays out for us in this part of his letter today. Every high priest in the days of ancient Israel was required to perform certain functions, various tasks and responsibilities laid out clearly in the scriptures and passed on from generation to generation of the priesthood. Chosen from among other men, the high priest was nevertheless called upon to serve as the mediator between his fellow human beings and God. Standing in that liminal role, the high priests straddled the threshold between the sacred and the profane, between heaven and earth, so that they mighty mediate the needs of the people before the very footstool of God. With sacrifice and prayer, through the offering of gifts, they prayed for the cleansing of the people's sins, so that they might be restored in the sight of God.

But there is always a danger when one is engaged in such a high ministry, such an important role, such a unique position. The danger is that one could simply forget who they are and why they are there, eventually coming to believe that they are something special, someone who was better than those whom they served. But the admonition laid upon all of us who serve in ministry is not to forget that we are to be the servants of the servants of God. So the high priest was not to be above himself but rather to deal gently with those whom he is called is serve for he must always remember his own human frailty and weakness.

Finally, there was one other thing that the high priest was asked to keep in mind as he went about his duties and that is that he did not choose this role but rather he was chosen for it. Looking back, I now see how some of my own sense of self-importance may have harmed me that day and I learned the hard way from that interview that I was not choosing the job or the firm or the business. Rather, they were choosing me and the choice was theirs to define the job in a certain way rather than leaving it up to me to define it for them. I was not to choose whether this was for me but rather I would be chosen. So it is that the job description of the high priest is laid out, the duties and responsibility outlined — to mediate, to serve, and to understand that he was chosen for this most important of jobs.

But like the days of our flesh, the days of the earthly high priesthood will soon come to an end. Who will then step in to fulfill that role and will they be up to the job? Writing to the people of God gathered in those difficult days of the early church, the writer of Hebrews answers with a fervent, "Yes." This Jesus, this Christ, is the one qualified for the job, simply because he was chosen by God himself for the role of high priest. This one who came from God, indeed the one who is the Son of God, this one has been appointed to the role of priest. And not just any priest, but a priest forever according to the order of Melchizedeck, that great and powerful priest and king who came from the midst of time in Israel's ancient history to bring gifts to Abraham. What better qualification is there than to be God's own chosen one, to be his anointed to fulfill this role of being the great high priest?

But this is no ordinary applicant who has come to fill this job. Rather this Jesus is not only chosen of God but he is also God himself. Coming from God, can this high priest relate to those whom he is called to serve? Can he relate to humankind in a way that we can grasp? Again the answer is a fervent, "Yes!" For "in the days of his flesh, Jesus offered up prayers and supplications, with loud cries and tears ..." (v. 7a). What more human way is there to identify with one another than through our suffering? We have our joys at times, our moments of strengthen drawn from mutual pleasure, smiles to be shared with all around us. But it is in our suffering that we come to know the humanity of each other. It is in our tears that we plumb the depths of our darkest fears and pains, going to that place where there is no hiding from the reality that there is a humanity which will one day bring us to the side of the grave itself.

Jesus knows our suffering for he has suffered before us. With loud cries in the garden, he begged for the cup to be taken from him. With supplications, he prayed, beseeching to know where his God was as he hung on the cross. With spit on his face, thorns in his head, and stripes on his back, he had endured to the fullest the suffering of humankind. His suffering is not for his own good, but in his suffering, he unites himself with all his creation, humbly taking upon himself the sin of the world and so, "by his stripes" we are healed. It was because of his obedience to God that his prayer endured in suffering was heard by God, bringing God to heal the breech that had divided him from his creation. It is through Christ, and Christ alone, that we are made one again with God. It is through Christ, and Christ alone, that we have been given the gift of eternal salvation. It is through Christ, and Christ alone, that the pain of our suffering is overcome and the promise of joys everlasting are given to us.

I knew that day that I could not fill the expectations of that job description. I knew that day that the job was beyond me. I understood that I was not qualified for that role. The description of work to which the writer of Hebrews refers us today is for Christ to be the high priest, indeed the great high priest, for he was not to be like those earthly high priests of old. He was not to be like those earlier high priests; the one who fills this new role must still serve as mediator; he must be chosen of God and he should be able to relate to those whom he is called to serve. Only Jesus could fulfill that role, for only Jesus could be a high priest who would not just offer sacrifice for sins but rather for the sin of the whole world, the sin which had caused the breaking of the relationship between God and his creation, the sin which could only be erased through the shedding of the blood of the Son of God who would freely offer himself for the eternal salvation of all. Only Jesus could fulfill that role, for only Jesus had been chosen by God in this way, declared beloved by the voice of God as he rose up out of the waters and the Spirit descended upon him. In his suffering, he lifted up all our suffering to God, his Father, knowing that he would be heard because of his reverent submission. It is that work that only one can fill, but now it has been filled; the great work of salvation is finished; humankind is redeemed. Thanks be to God. Amen.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Sermons for Sundays after Pentecost (Last Third): The Perfect Sacrifice, by Patrick J. Rooney