Hebrews 4:14-5:10 · Jesus the Great High Priest
Someone Bigger than Phil
Hebrews 4:14-5:10
Sermon
by King Duncan
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Several years ago, Carl Reiner and Mel Brooks did a comedy skit called the “2013 Year Old Man.” In the skit, Reiner interviews Brooks, who is the old gentleman. At one point, Reiner asks the old man, “Did you always believe in the Lord?”

Brooks replied: “No. We had a guy in our village named Phil, and for a time we worshiped him.”

Reiner was surprised: “You worshiped a guy named Phil? Why?”

Brooks replied: “Because he was big, and mean, and he could break you in two with his bare hands!”

Reiner asked: “Did you have prayers?”

Brooks answered: “Yes, would you like to hear one? O Phil, please don’t be mean, and hurt us, or break us in two with your bare hands.”

Reiner: “So when did you start worshiping the Lord?”

Brooks: “Well, one day a big thunderstorm came up, and a lightning bolt hit Phil. We gathered around and saw that he was dead. Then we said to one another, ‘There’s something bigger than Phil!’” (1)

Well, yes, there is something bigger than Phil. There is Someone bigger than the totality of our universe.

Daniel Benedict tells about a group of college students who were having a discussion about the nature of God. Some of the students did not believe in God . . . but most had a belief of some kind. The discussion was lively. One young woman said, “God is like a great big Teddy Bear who gives me a hug when I need it.”

To this, a young man replied, “No Teddy Bear God for me! God is the Chief Justice of some kind of universal Supreme Court who’s going to nail me to the wall when I show up for judgment!”

The discussion raged on for some time and finally someone offered up this idea, “God is whatever we think God is. One person’s idea is as good as another person’s idea. We shouldn’t be judging other people’s religious ideas.”

This opinion seemed to gain traction with the group. Benedict, who had been mostly silent to this point, then asked a question. “What about Son of Sam’s idea of God? He said God told him to kill some people. Is his idea of God okay?”

The group decided to modify their opinion just a bit. “People can have any idea they want of God as long as they don’t hurt other people,” they decided. “That really sounded like the most reasonable way to many of the students. Nobody gets hurt and everybody gets their own god . . . .” (2)

These young people were genuinely searching for a way to understand God. Most of us, however, would be uncomfortable with the idea that God is whatever people think that God is. We believe that God has revealed himself through Jesus Christ. God is neither a Teddy Bear nor is God a Supreme Court justice who is going to nail us when we show up for judgment. God, we believe, is like Jesus.

The writer of Hebrews spells out our understanding of God and God’s relationship to us in our lesson for today. He writes: “Therefore, since we have a great high priest who has ascended into heaven, Jesus the Son of God, let us hold firmly to the faith we profess. For we do not have a high priest who is unable to empathize with our weaknesses, but we have one who has been tempted in every way, just as we are yet he did not sin. Let us then approach God’s throne of grace with confidence, so that we may receive mercy and find grace to help us in our time of need.”

Notice how we are to come to God’s throne we are to approach God with confidence. What is the first thing we learn about God from this passage? We learn that God is approachable.

This is important. Old Testament writers had an entirely different view of God. To approach the Old Testament God was to risk life and limb. The “throne of grace” of which the writer of Hebrews speaks is the New Testament equivalent of the Old Testament Ark of the Covenant.

In the book of Numbers, you may remember, when the ark was captured by the Philistines, numerous people, including some who merely looked at the ark, were killed by its power. Similarly, even some of the priests of the tribe of Aaron who served in the Temple were warned that viewing the ark would result in their immediate death (4:20).

And, in 1 Chronicles 13 we read about the time when David and his soldiers moved the ark from Abinadab’s house. When they came to the threshing floor of Kidon, one of the soldiers named Uzzah reached out his hand to steady the ark, because the oxen stumbled, and he was struck dead simply and solely because he had put his hand on the ark (8-10). The Ark of the Covenant was so holy that only the high priest was to approach it, and he was to do so with fear and trembling, for any transgression against the Ark would have fatal consequences for him too. Since the ark was representative of God, the idea that God was unapproachable was the accepted norm.

But this is not so with the throne of grace. Our high priest, Jesus Christ, has already interceded in our behalf. And because he has, we can approach the throne of grace confidently and boldly. He has made us sons and daughters of the Most High.

You don’t approach your parents with fear and trembling, do you? Our young people, you don’t come crawling on your hands and knees with your face buried in the carpet and say, “O exalted and majestic father, please do me the honor of granting your humble servant, worm of the dust that I am, the high honor of borrowing the car tonight.” You don’t approach your father like that, do you? Well, some of us may.

Some of us may have grown us with a very strict father. I like the way one older comedian once described the changes in the modern family. He said, “When we were kids we were disciplined harshly. My father was very strict, but along came the electric razor and took away the razor strop. Then furnaces took away the old woodshed. And along came taxes and the worries of it took away my dad’s hair and with that the old hair brush disappeared. And that’s why kids today are running wild: the old man has run out of weapons!”

Some of you may have had parents who were quite harsh in their methods of discipline. Thankfully, parents have, for the most part, changed . . . For most of us, the image of “father” is one of kindness and accessibility. Not for all, unfortunately, but for most. And that is the image that the writer of Hebrews wants us to have of God. Jesus called God, Abba, “Daddy.” That is the first reason the writer of Hebrews writes, “Let us then approach God’s throne of grace with confidence . . .” Jesus showed us that God’s nature is love and that God is approachable.

But why should we come to the throne of grace in the first place? The writer tells us why: “so that we may receive mercy and find grace to help us in our time of need.” That is why we come. Life is hard. Sometimes it is cruel. Where do we turn at times like that? We approach the throne of grace. That is the second thing we learn about God from this passage. God is merciful; God understands our situation and cares.

Last year the world of women’s basketball was stunned when Pat Summitt, long-time coach of the Tennessee Lady Vols and the winningest coach in the history of either men’s or women’s basketball announced she was stepping down as coach because she was battling early-onset Alzheimer’s. She said she would fight this dread disease with determination and with faith.

Her situation reminds me of a pastor named Bob Davis. Some years ago Davis announced his retirement. His congregation was deeply shocked. Their eyes filled with tears as he told them he had Alzheimer’s and would have to resign at age fifty-two. Listen to what he said to them: “As a Christian I belong completely to Christ. My life is not mine but Christ’s. Today my ministry draws to a close and I can say with Paul, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith. Now I stand at the finish line in victory, because God set the distance I was to run . . . and I am finished at fifty-two!

“Pray for Betty, my wife,” he said, “as I turn guardianship over to her. I will not suffer nearly as much as she will. Pray that I in no way inadvertently disgrace our Lord, this church or the people I love. Finally, when I get to that stage where my mind is gone, pray that the Lord will take me home quickly. The glory of being with Christ makes me gasp with joy.”

When asked, “What about miracles?” Bob Davis said, “I am like Paul whose thorn in the flesh God did not remove and I don’t expect God will remove my Alzheimer’s thorn . . . But I have made up my mind to find joy in my weakness because that means a deeper experience of the power of Christ.” (3)

What a testimony of faith by this devoted pastor! Why do we come to the throne of grace? Usually, it is “so that we may receive mercy and find grace to help us in our time of need.” That is what Christ teaches us about God’s nature and character: God is approachable; God understands and cares about us in our time of need.

But there is one thing more to remember: We have access to that throne of grace only because of what Christ did for us on the cross. We did not receive God’s grace because of any merit on our part. We received that grace because of what Christ did in our behalf.

The writer of Hebrews says, “Therefore, since we have a great high priest who has ascended into heaven, Jesus the Son of God, let us hold firmly to the faith we profess. For we do not have a high priest who is unable to empathize with our weaknesses, but we have one who has been tempted in every way, just as we are yet he did not sin. Let us then approach God’s throne of grace with confidence, so that we may receive mercy and find grace to help us in our time of need.” We approach that throne confidently only because Christ gave himself for us to make it possible.

Henri Barbusse once wrote a novel with the French title, Le Fleu, or The Flower. In this novel there are two soldiers. One of the soldiers is a man of sterling character. His friend, however, whose name is Dominique has made many mistakes in his life.

In one passage the solder with the unblemished record has been wounded and is dying. He turns to Dominique and says: “It can’t be long now. Listen, Dominique. You’ve lived a bad life. There are many convictions against your name. But there are no convictions against me. There’s nothing on my name. Take my name. Take it‑‑I give it to you. Straight off, you’ve no more convictions. Take my name, and give me yours‑‑so that I can carry [all your past mistakes] away with me.” (4)

That soldier truly cared about his friend. They would exchange names and he would bear forever his friend’s misdoings. What if we had a friend like that one who would take all our past mistakes upon himself? The Scriptures say this is indeed what Christ has done for us‑‑given us his good name, as it were, and taken our name which is stained by sin. Isaiah writes: “Surely he took up our pain and bore our suffering . . . he was pierced for our transgressions, he was crushed for our iniquities; the punishment that brought us peace was on him, and by his wounds we are healed.” (Isaiah 53:4‑5)

Have you ever thought to yourself, “Ah, if I could only be 18 again and know what I know now! If only I could live my life over, I would do a much better job the second time around.” Unfortunately, that is one luxury that is never given to any of us. Time marches relentlessly onward. Pontius Pilate spoke for all of us when he said, “What I have written, I have written.”

We can’t go back. We cannot undo the past. We can, however, do something about the future. Some of us are perhaps carrying a great deal of excess baggage with us from the past. If we could just forget the past‑‑with its heartaches, disappointments and errors‑‑if we could just somehow lay that burden down, the future would hold much more promise for us. Christ offers us that opportunity. “He was pierced for our transgressions, he was crushed for our iniquities; the punishment that brought us peace was on him, and by his wounds we are healed.”

I understand that, on the edge of a lake in the North Carolina mountains, there is a cross that is about thirty feet high. The cross is placed so that its full image can reflect on the water. The cross is painted white and, at night, a spotlight floods it with light so that the reflection is even more brilliant against the darkness.

One night for devotions, a youth leader took a group of kids and their counselors down to the edge of that lake and had them stand behind the cross, so that the light was shining toward them and the lake stretched out before them.

Finally, the leader asked them to look up at the cross and tell the group what they saw. Wanting to sound scholarly and devout, the young people blurted out responses like, “forgiveness,” and “salvation,” and “sacrifice.”

This counselor wanted them to see more. “What you should see when you look up at the cross,” he said, “is God, on the other side, looking back down at you. Whenever God looks at us, he looks at us through the cross of his Son, Jesus. His victory over our sin, his victory over our chaos is what God sees.” (5)

That’s how God looks at us—through the prism of the cross of Christ. And because of that cross God sees us as if we were without blemish.

A father says to his son, “How much do I love you?” Then he opens his arms as far as he is able and says, “I love you us thiiiiissssss much.” That’s what we ought to see when we look at the cross.

The writer of Hebrews shows us God’s character and God’s relationship to us, God’s children: “Therefore, since we have a great high priest . . . Jesus the Son of God . . . Let us then approach God’s throne of grace with confidence, so that we may receive mercy and find grace to help us in our time of need.”


1. Rev. Eldon Reich, http://www.aberdeenmethodist.info/Reichsermons/thanksgiving2007.pdf.

2. http://www.lectionarysermons.com/june_18_00.htm.

3. Rev. Robert W. Bohl, Day 1 http://day1.org/851-what_has_religion_done_for_you.

4. George E. Vandeman, I Met A Miracle (Nashville: Southern Publishing Association, 1971).

5. The Reverend Phillip W. Martin, Jr., http://eman.obroskyds.org/sermons/Sermon_20080914.pdf.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Dynamic Preaching Sermons Fourth Quarter 2012, by King Duncan