Hebrews 4:14-5:10 · Jesus the Great High Priest
Salvation Through His Suffering
Hebrews 4:14-5:10
Sermon
by Dennis Kastens
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The people of his ignoble day harassed him, hunted him, and lied about him until they got him where they wanted him - on a T-shaped scaffold intended for the worst of criminals!

But though it is true that Jesus thus suffered, nevertheless when we look at Calvary, we are not witnessing a murder. We are not witnessing the death of a martyr. We are not witnessing the execution of a political revolutionary who made a mistake in public relations and got himself crucified. We are not witnessing drama - an actor following a script!

Jesus never won an Oscar - because he wasn’t acting. Calvary was dead serious. Calvary was a sacrifice. It was God dying in man’s place. That’s why he came!

It is true that Jesus was often tempted to turn on the bright lights and play for the audience. He was tempted to use miracles and magic to smooth his way. He was tempted to turn stones into bread when he hadn’t eaten for forty days. He was tempted to jump off the pinnacle of the temple and show everybody who he was. He was tempted to answer the dares of his enemies by coming down from the cross in a blaze of glory. He was tempted to ascend to heaven in sight of the wondering crowd and leave us to die for our own sins. But thank God he never yielded. Jesus was not acting that day on the cross. He was dying for you and me!

But you say, "How can I know for sure that the man who died on that cross is really the Son of God?"

Look at his life. Look at his work. Look at his character. Look at his teaching. Look at his miracles. Look at his healing. Look at his incredible compassion. Look at Calvary!

And look at the predictions of the prophets and the way Jesus fulfilled them in his life and in his death - down to the greatest detail. He came when they said he would come, died when they said he would die. He was ever at the right place at the right time according to the prophetic schedule.

Did Jesus engineer all of this? Did he manipulate men and circumstances so that everything would come out right? Hardly! Could he have manipulated the circumstances of his birth, or of the hours that he lay in Joseph’s tomb?

Jesus, in his life and in his death, fulfilled hundreds of Old Testament predictions. And the chance of an imposter’s fulfilling a few of them is so small as to boggle the mind.

No doubt of it. Jesus was who he said he was! We can be sure of that.

But wait! In spite of his faultless life, in spite of his incomparable teaching, in spite of all the miracles, in spite of all the prophecies fulfilled - it narrows down to this: Did this man "become the source of eternal salvation"? (Hebrews 5:9) Did he have power over death? Did he walk out of a tomb? Has he power to grant us, therefore, unending life beyond this present realm? It all stands or falls on how we answer, as to whether his suffering and death had this victorious climax.

If he didn’t, he was the greatest imposter who ever lived. If he claimed to be God but couldn’t conquer death, then it is all a heartless hoax. And all the mountain of evidence doesn’t add a

thing to his claims - but only to the enormity of the deception!

What good would there be in a God who promised life but couldn’t keep his word? In a cross that could forgive but could not save? In a gospel limited to the past - without any future?

Jesus said, "I am the living one; for I was dead and now I am alive forevermore, and I hold the keys of death and death’s domain." (Revelation 1:18 NEB)

Jesus’ victory over death announces to all that the anguish, temptation, torment, and treachery which he endured was worth it, because it was the avenue by which full payment for our sins could he made. "Through what he suffered ... he became the source of eternal salvation to all who obey him." (Hebrews 5:8, 9)

The worst that evil could ever do, either the evil of man or of Satan, was the slaying of the only innocent One since the world’s foundation, Jesus of Nazareth. And all this our Savior endured. He deliberately courted the conflict; he took the battle to the enemy; he accepted the cross as a part of his consecration for the sake of our salvation. Though he suffered beyond all telling, yet the evil passions of people did not bear down upon him and finish him off. Jesus laid down his life of his own accord. The prince of this world, Satan, had nothing on him. Jesus chose to drink the cup of suffering to the dregs. He was the master of the situation. He was king and victor, even in death.

Little wonder that St. Paul could affirm: the eternal "yes" has been sounded in him. God’s "yes" which drowns out the million and one "nos" of puny man and of broken satan has been announced in the ringing declaration: "Now is Christ risen from the dead and become the first to rise of all who sleep the sleep of death." "Through what he suffered ... he became the source of eternal salvation to all who obey him." (Hebrews 5:8, 9)

Because of his glorious victory over all suffering and even death itself, we who pass through lesser forms of trials, temptations, and sorrows can see them in their proper perspective - as avenues through which God can accomplish his higher purposes. Every affliction and seeming tragedy ultimately can result in unfathomable blessing.

Years ago a tornado struck the prairies of Minnesota, killing many, injuring hundreds and almost demolishing the town of Rochester. An elderly doctor and his two sons worked for days aiding the stricken, bandaging wounds, and setting broken limbs. Their heroic work did not go unnoticed. Financial backing was offered for a large hospital, provided the doctor and his sons took charge. They agreed, founding in 1889 a clinic which soon attracted wide attention. For years from fifteen to twenty operations were performed daily. People came from all walks of life to the Mayo Brothers’ Clinic. When the tornado struck, people reacted, "God has forgotten!" Yet blessing came out of disaster, and today the prairie city is known around the world and has brought blessing to uncounted millions. What seemed to be a time of anguish and travail resulted in unimaginable blessing and victory.

Joseph, his father’s favorite son with his coat of many colors, must have thought the end of the world had come the day his brothers threw him into the pit. Can you see him down in that old dry well, banging on the sides and crying out, "Has God forgotten me?" As he begged his brothers not to sell him to the Midianites, but to no avail, can you hear him exclaim, "Can there be a God to let this happen to me?" Years later when exalted to second ruler in Egypt, he was used to save the lives of many, including his father and brothers. He said to his brothers when reconciled to them some years later, "You thought evil against me, but God meant it unto good." Heartache and misfortune were followed by blessing and exultation.

One spring day on an apple farm in Michigan, some men who had been pruning an orchard made a great pile of branches about 100 yards from the farmer’s barn. One morning the farmer saw a bird carrying to that pile of prunings materials for a nest. So he marked the spot with a stick. At sundown, with the bird flying about and chirping wildly, the man reached into the pile and tore the nest apart. If the bird were thinking, she was saying to herself, "How cruel this man is!" Next day the man saw the bird again trying to build at another place in the same pile. Again he marked it with a stick, and at night he destroyed all the work that the bird had done. No doubt the bird’s wild flutterings and chirpings were bird language for "This evil man! How terrible he is to destroy my nest!" On the third day the farmer noticed that the bird was building in a rose bush near the house. He smiled and let the bird alone. The farmer had intended to burn the branch pile, and he knew if the bird were allowed to build among those branches, the nest and its little fledglings would have been destroyed. So in great kindness he had torn the two earlier nests apart.

Disappointment - his appointment,
Change one letter, then I see,
That the thwarting of my purpose
Is God’s better choice for me.

His appointment must be blessing,
Though it comes in disguise
For the end from the beginning
Open to his wisdom lies.

On the cross of Calvary we see that there are no accidents! As Jesus hung there, "the just for the unjust," it looked as though there had been an accident; that God had made a mistake. But on the third day after, when "God raised him for our justification," all believers knew that "the cross was for our good" and so the previous Friday was called "Good." Out of that seeming tragedy, Christ paid the eternal price demanded by God for our sins. "The Lord laid on him the iniquity of us all."

In the nineteenth century a missionary fell into the hands of cannibals. "Going to eat me, I presume?" he asked. The chief grunted. "Don’t do it," said the missionary, "because you won’t like me. I don’t taste good." Thereupon the missionary took a knife from his pocket and sliced a piece from the calf of his leg. This he handed to the chief, who took one bite and choked. The missionary worked on the island for thirty years. He had a cork leg. Little did he know that the tragedy which cost him his leg years before would be used to give him entree among cannibals for a third of a century.

As we remain in contact with the resurrected Christ, operative through his church and through the means of grace, we have the bonafide access which we need in dealing with every extremity of life which may come our way. Knowing that in the end we shall be victorious enables us not only to endure suffering, difficulties and even momentary reverses, but actually helps us to see such seeming obstacles as actual bench marks and stations along the way which help us to remain aware that we are traveling on the proper path. "Whom the Lord loves, he chastens, and scourges every son whom he receives." It all serves to heighten our appreciation of what he endured, and helps us to focus more reverently upon the true significance of Golgotha and what it means in terms of our eternal destiny." Through what he suffered ... he became the source of eternal salvation to all who obey him. (Hebrews 5:8, 9)

O perfect life of love!
All, all, is finished now,
All that he left his throne above
To do for us below.

No pain that we can share
But he has felt it smart;
All forms of human grief and care
Has pierced that tender heart.

And on his thorn-crowned head
And on his sinless soul
Our sins and all their guilt were laid
That he might make us whole.

- Henry Baker 1875

CSS Publishing Co., Inc., Once You Were Darkness, by Dennis Kastens