Hebrews 4:14-5:10 · Jesus the Great High Priest
Rise Above It
Hebrews 4:14-5:10
Sermon
by King Duncan
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Nothing perplexes the sensitive heart more than the problem of human suffering. Studdert-Kennedy used to say that anyone who was undisturbed by the problem of pain was suffering from one of two things: either from a hardening of the heart, or a softening of the brain. He's absolutely right.  Is there any purpose to pain? Any advantage to adversity? Any solace in suffering?

"Don't be discouraged, Charlie Brown," Schroeder tells him. "These early defeats help to build character for later on in life." "For what later on in life?" asks Charlie Brown. "For more defeats!" replies Schroeder. Charlie Brown then invests in five cents' worth of Lucy's psychiatric help. At first her advice sounds a bit more sophisticated: "Adversity builds character," she says. "Without adversity a person could never mature and face up to all the things in life!" "What things?" he asks. "More adversity!" she says. (1) 

Our text today from Hebrews is perplexing. It speaks of Christ being made obedient through suffering: "In the days of his flesh," we read in verse 7 of chapter five, "Jesus offered up prayers and supplications, with loud cries and tears, to him who was able to save him from death, and he was heard for his godly fear. Although he was a Son, he learned obedience through what he suffered; and being made perfect he became the source of eternal salvation to all who obey him...." (RSV) We don't know how Jesus learned obedience through suffering. After all, he was the Christ! Still we know that he suffered, and because he suffered there are some helpful and hopeful conclusions we can draw. 

THE FIRST IS THAT PAIN IS AN INEVITABLE PART OF LIFE. Even Christ could not avoid pain and complete his mission and neither can we. 

Charlie Brown, in another "Peanuts" cartoon, walks away from Lucy after a baseball game, head down, totally dejected. "Another ball game lost! Good grief!" Charlie moans. "I get tired of losing. Everything I do, I lose!" Lucy replies, "Look at it this way, Charlie Brown. We learn more losing than we do from winning." Charlie shouts at Lucy, who is startled and flips over backwards, "That makes me the smartest person in the world." Don't worry, Charlie Brown, you've got a lot of company. 

Dr. John Drakeford, well-known Christian psychologist says that at any given time one out of every ten people is going through a crisis experience.  Certainly the Bible knows about pain, crises, suffering. There is Moses gazing upon a promised land that he will never enter. Hannah, downhearted, unable to eat, because of a child she is not able to bear. Elijah, fearful of his life, fleeing into the desert, alone and miserable. The widow of Nain, distracted by grief over the loss of her only son. The Gadarene demoniac, so emotionally wrought he is mutilating himself. The woman with the issue of blood. Twelve years of hemorrhaging, seeing doctor after doctor, all to no avail. Blind Bartimaeus, Mary and Martha at their brother's tomb. And, of course, Jesus upon the cross. The list could consume several pages.  The Bible knows about suffering. All kinds of suffering. Physical, emotional, spiritual. Many of us know about suffering. We've known pain, disappointment, failure, grief. 

We can sympathize with former Tampa Bay Buccaneers pro football coach John McKay. In the midst of a long, losing season, McKay was asked what he thought of his team's execution. His answer: "I'm in favor of it."
That's a joke for football fans. What life does to us sometimes, however, is no joke. Pain is an inevitable part of life. 

SOME PAIN MAY EVEN BE ESSENTIAL FOR OUR EMOTIONAL AND SPIRITUAL GROWTH. All sunshine makes a desert we say. Lucy was essentially right in her advice to Charlie Brown. Some adversity does build character. 

Consider the unique situation of birds in New Zealand, for example. That island nation has more flightless birds, I understand, than any other country on earth. Among these are the kiwi and the penguin. Scientists tell us that these birds had wings but lost them. They had no use for them. They had no natural predators on those beautiful islands and food was plentiful. Since there was no reason to fly, they didn't. Through neglect they lost their wings. 

Necessity is the mother of invention. Scholars point to the advanced technological progress of nations in the colder climates of the world. Where food and shelter are easily attained, there is no drive to innovate, to problem-solve. We live in a hard world in order that we might grow to our full stature as children of God. 

How difficult it must be for God, however, to watch us seek to cope with this hard world. 

Peter James Flamming tells about a young man who had been pitched from a horse and had been paralyzed. Slowly, but surely he had begun to respond. He had gone to the huge regional hospital for further therapy. On the day he was to take his first step, the people who helped him stand stood aside. He fell flat on his face. He wept in pain. Nobody moved. A chaplain, a friend and confidant of the family, felt every instinctive push to rush to his aid. But the therapists would not let him. Again the boy tried. Again the agony of the fall and the defeat. Again and again the cruelty continued, for it could indeed have been called that. Pain was the product of the whole occasion. Every part of the experience was painful. It was dreadfully painful to the young man. It was painful to the therapists who watched. It was painful to the chaplain who empathized. 

But the boy walked! The day came when he walked! Flamming contrasts that young man's painful experience with a cartoon he saw that showed a mother helping her son into a wheelchair. A nearby friend said, "I didn't know your son couldn't walk." The reply: "Oh, he can. But thank God he doesn't have to."  He goes on to say, "From everything we know in the Scripture, God is not like that mother. He is more like the therapists. He wants us to walk and run and soar. He is about the business of soul making. If He needs to work through this stained, bent-out-of-shape world we live in, He will. His will for us is not to make us happy or unhappy. It is to make us, us, as only He knows we can be. To will for us fullness and growth, He weaves into the tapestry of our lives both joy and pain. He will not give up until we all attain to the `unity of the faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God, to mature manhood, to the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ' (Eph. 4:13)." (2) Pain is inevitable in life. Pain may be essential to growth. 

UNDER CERTAIN CIRCUMSTANCES, PAIN CAN EVEN PROVE TO BE BENEFICIAL. 

You may know that the sound of a violin is determined by the type of wood from which it is constructed, as well as the s kill of the musician playing it. It has been determined that the best wood available today for making violins is found in the timberline of the highest mountain ranges. In the United States, craftsmen will seek the wood found on the peaks of the Rockies, 12,000 feet above sea level. Up there where the winds blow so fiercely and steadily that the bark to windward has no chance to grow, where the branches all point one way, and where a tree to live must stay on its knees all through its life, that is where the most resonant wood for violins is born and lives and dies. (3)  Through pain and perseverance is born the most beautiful music. In the same way there are those who will tell you that a painful and heart-wrenching experience turned out to be one of the most fortuitous events in their lives. 

Some of you may know that Julio Iglesias was a professional soccer player in Madrid when a car crash ended his career and left him paralyzed for a year and a half. A sympathetic nurse gave Iglesias a guitar to help pass the time in the hospital. Though he had no prior musical aspirations, Iglesias went on to become a huge success in the pop-music field.  Iglesias's accident marked a watershed in his life, a turning point after which everything changed. (4) 

A less serious event changed forever the fortune of an old-time vaudeville performer named Al Jolson. Jolson was starring in a musical, Honeymoon Express, early in his career, when he came down with a serious ingrown toenail on his left foot. The pain was so intense that he was on the verge of dropping out of the show. Instead, he managed to relieve the pain that fateful night by getting down on one knee halfway through the performance, and pouring out his sentimental ballads with a great show of emotion. He later worked the technique into his famous "My Mammy" number--long after the offending toe had healed. It became his trademark and helped make him a star. (5) 

As Tim Hansel says in his book, YOU GOTTA KEEP DANCIN', "We have two choices when we hit adverse trials. They can break us or we can break them. Not surprisingly, some of the great achievements of men and women in the past have been achieved by those suffering the fires of personal trial. But unlike most of us, these men and women wring from their adversity the determination and insight to do what others have not done. The book "Pilgrim's Progress" was not written from a pleasant mountain getaway, but from the dingy British jail cell that became home for John Bunyan. Florence Nightingale did not reorganize the hospitals of England from a top-flight, lushly decorated health management office, she managed to do it while bed-ridden herself. Pasteur was semi-paralyzed, but still attacked others' diseases. American historian, Francis Parkman, suffered so terribly that he could work no more than five minutes at a time. Yet he managed to turn out twenty classic volumes of history. These men and women broke their trial. Others let it break them." (6) Pain is inevitable in life. Some pain is essential. Some pain can even be beneficial. Here's the good news for the day, however. 

WHETHER OUR PAIN IS MILD OR SEVERE, JESUS CAN HELP. 

The writer of the letter to the Hebrews says that since Christ has been made perfect by his sufferings, he is the path of salvation for all who obey him. He knows what it is to suffer, thus he is equipped to aid us in our times of suffering.
Frank Lloyd Wright, the noted architect, recalled how he was awakened one night by a frantic telephone call from a client whose house had just recently been completed. It seems it had been raining, the roof leaked, and the living room was flooded. "What should I do?" asked the distraught client.  Calmly, Frank Lloyd Wright replied, "Rise above it."
That is what faith in Christ allows us to do. It allows us to rise above our failures, our disappointments, our fears, our frustrations, our grief and our pain. By obedience to him and faith in him we can be victorious. 

Pain is inevitable in life. Some of it is essential, even beneficial. However, we can rise above it by faith in Jesus Christ.


1.  THE PARABLES OF PEANUTS. 

2.  LAYMAN'S LIBRARY OF CHRISTIAN DOCTRINE, (Nashville: Broadman Press, 1985).

3. Don Emmitte. 

4. "Take Charge of Your Life" Robert H. Lauer and Jeanette P. Lauer in Reader's Digest, Sept. 88.

5.  Joe Franklin, A GIFT FOR PEOPLE, (New York: M. Evans and Company, Inc., 1971).

6.  (Elgin, Illinois: David C. Cook Publishing Co., 1985).      

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan