Hebrews 2:5-18 · Jesus Made Like His Brothers
Living in The Present
Hebrews 1:1-4; 2:5-12
Sermon
by Thomas Lentz
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Just stop for a moment and take a look at how many opportunities are yours today, right now, this moment. Think about where you are — this church, this group of people, the person sitting beside you. Think about the one behind you and in front of you. Consider how your presence might affect each of these people. Think about what your presence here stands for in this congregation and in this community. This is your life! You are making a statement by being here. You can use these moments not only to fill yourself with inspiration and power from on high, but also to make a difference in this community, in the lives of those about you.

I want you to take note of the details of your life, how you are spending your moments, what thoughts you are accepting into your conscious mind. Are they positive, constructive, and helpful? Do you make every effort to shut out critical, negative, and judgmental thoughts?

Let's consider the message that scripture brings us. "What makes you care about us humans?" the Hebrews letter asks. "Why are you concerned for weaklings such as us? You made us lower than the angels for a while. Yet you have crowned us with glory and honor, and you have put everything under our power" (Hebrews 2:6-8 cf).

Anyone who doesn't grasp the excitement of that statement is asleep or not listening. Many people today are fascinated with angels. But forget the angels. You are sitting in the midst of Jesus' brothers and sisters who have been crowned with glory and honor.

Once you grasp the potency of this relationship you have with Jesus, your brother, and once you come to the realization of who you are in God's fellowship of faith, no earthly circumstance can stop you. Wake up! You have been crowned with glory and honor. It is confirmed not by the size of your house or your bank account but by the halo of glory and honor God has placed on your head.

Helen Keller said, "Life is a daring adventure or it is nothing." You can sit in the shadows and whine and complain and lament your fate. That is certainly what blind, deaf Helen Keller could have done. Or you can come out into the light and celebrate your royal heritage. You are not alone. You are not lost. You are in his grip!

You need not be timid about it. When you worship, let your doubts dissolve and let your faith be strengthened. When you sing the songs of faith, allow the words to penetrate your mind and punctuate your thoughts. When you go out from this place and face the hard things in life, let it strengthen you, not break you. God made Jesus perfect by suffering. God refines you and me when we suffer. The inevitability of suffering is something most of us dread. Some individuals fill their medicine cabinets with drugs that will help them escape any physical or emotional pain. Books are written asking why we should have to suffer. But psychologist Nathaniel Branden has said that suffering is just about the easiest of human activities. Being happy is just about the hardest. The brilliant scientist, Stephen Hawking, said that until he developed Lou Gehrig's disease he had never really learned to appreciate his life but had wasted much of it in meaningless activity.

Faith teaches us we can befriend our suffering. Suffering cleanses us from human pride. It redirects our focus from frivolity to faith. If we look at it correctly it can bring us closer to God. We are too afraid of suffering. Everybody wants medals but nobody wants scars.

Some time ago I remember reading about a blacksmith who had been converted to God. An intelligent doubter approached him: "Why is it you have so much trouble? I have been watching you. Since you joined the church, you have had twice as many trials as you had before. I thought that Christians were supposed to be protected by their God from trouble. Isn't that what the preachers tell us?"

The blacksmith answered, "Do you see this piece of iron? It is for the springs of a carriage. I have been ‘tempering' it for some time. To do this I heat it red-hot, and then plunge it into a tub of ice-cold water. This I do many times. If I find it taking ‘temper,' I heat and hammer it unmercifully. In getting the right piece of iron I found several that were too brittle. So I threw them in a scrap pile. Those scraps are worth about a cent a pound; this carriage spring is very valuable.

"God saves us for something more than to have a good time — that's the way I see it. We have a good time all right, but God wants us for service just as I want this piece of iron. And he has put the ‘temper' of Christ in us by testing us with trial."

Because there is suffering in your heart, you are able to understand the suffering of God on a cross. Because of your suffering you have learned more about God's love and your love has been deepened.

You and I have a high priest who understands our trials. He is Jesus, the Son of God. God had the power to save Jesus from death. Jesus begged God to save him. Although Jesus is God's own Son, still he had to suffer before he could learn what it really meant to obey God. Suffering made Jesus perfect (Hebrews 5:7-9).

When our main concern is to shield our children from pain, we will produce self-centered brats who cannot make it in the real world. Most of the truths that we learn in life grow out of our wounds. That is the lesson that comes from tough love, the kind of love that enables us to refrain from protecting our loved ones from the consequences that will refine and improve them.

In our communal life, it is not always easy to pray for that person who makes life difficult. It is hard to practice the art of patience, to rejoice with our neighbor when he brags about his new car, his new job, or her latest purchase.

Do not let the devil manipulate you with envy, but rise above it and celebrate with your brother or sister. For with you, possession has been replaced with power, God's almighty power. For God has crowned you with glory and honor, and has put everything under your power.

While it is not in my nature to take the vow of poverty, I have come to realize that possessions are totally incapable of building community or producing lasting comfort and peace. And while I am too human to deny myself the pleasure of shiny chrome or colorful threads, I know that this does not build relationships. It does not enhance my worth in the eyes of my brethren. In fact, one has to be careful that it does not create envy and division. What brings unity and community, brotherhood and benevolence is humility, compassion, and sharing our gifts with those who matter.

Today we think of the word "economy" in terms of money. The word comes from the Greek oikonomia. Okos is house in Greek. And nemein means to manage. How do you manage your house? That used to mean, how do you manage your life, the only life you have or will ever have. Some dictionaries list the sixth definition of economy as "the method of God's government of and activity within the world." This refers to the way that God works with you and with me. And how does he work with us? Paul, in his letter to the Ephesians, writes, I want you to know about the great and mighty power that God has for us who believe. It is the same wonderful power he used when he raised Christ from death and let him sit at his right side in heaven (Ephesians 1:18-20). When Paul talks about the great and mighty power that God has for you and me, he's not talking about feeble human efforts. He's talking about resurrection power — the power to transform death into life, the power to break the iron chains of addiction, the power to show compassion in the midst of hate.

You have heard many sermons that exhort you to repent. They can be pretty depressing, causing you to think the worst of yourself as though you just stole something from Wal-Mart and need to make amends. But repent means to turn around. Watch out and don't let your life be stolen from you by what you do. The Lord of life wants you to have life and have it abundantly.

Scientists tell us that we employ only a small part of our brain. We also use only a small part of our faith power. I am crowned with honor and glory? Me? My goodness, think what I can do with that! Nothing can separate you or me from God's love: not death, not angels, not powers above or below, nothing in all creation. Crowned with glory and honor — that's you and me. Let us not underestimate what we can do with our lives — the love we can share, the hope we can bring, the example we can show to someone whom God might be putting in our path. Amen.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Sermons for Sundays after Pentecost (Middle Third): Sleeping in on Sunday, by Thomas Lentz