Hebrews 4:14-5:10 · Jesus the Great High Priest
Who The Heck Is Melchizedek?
Hebrews 5:5-10
Sermon
by John B. Jamison
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There were five kings; joined together to fight for their independence. There was King Bera of Sodom, King Birsha of Gomorrah, King Shinab of Admah, King Shemeber of Zeboiim, and the King of Bela. For the past twelve years, those kings had served the King of Elam, Chedorlaomer. They each ruled their own countries, but they each paid Chedorlaomer for the privilege to do it. Not any longer — the five kings brought their armies together in the Valley of Siddim near the Dead Sea and prepared to fight for their independence.

Chedolaomer did not come to the fight alone. King Arioch of Ellasar and King Tidal of Goiim sent their armies to fight alongside the army of Chedorlaomer. Together, they formed an army that was out to teach a lesson to anyone who might ever think of rebelling against those in power. We read in Genesis fourteen that they didn’t wait until they got to the valley to make their point. While the armies of Chedorlaomer and his partners were still on the way to the real fight, they subdued the Rephaim in Ashteroth-karnaim, the Zuzim in Ham, the Emim in Shaveh-kiriathaim, and the Horites in the hill country of Seir as far as El-paran on the edge of the wilderness. On their way back home after the battle, they subdued the Amalekites and Amorites in Hazazon-tamar.

Then they arrived at the Valley of Siddim. Genesis reminds us that the valley of the Dead Sea was a very difficult place. It was not only extremely dry and hot, but the ground was so low it was scattered with places where hot oil seeped up from the earth and created pits of thick tar. Someone not being very careful could find themselves trapped in one of those pits. Even though the rebels brought five armies to fight Chedorlaomer’s four, once the fighting began it didn’t take long for the rebels to see they were out-classed and their battle for independence was lost. Many were killed. Many tried to flee and fell into a waiting pit of tar. The rest were taken as prisoners.

They didn’t just take the army. To make their point even more clear, the armies of Chedorlaomer marched into the cities of the five rebellious countries and took everyone and everything as spoils of war. As they loaded up their prisoners from the city of Sodom, one of the men taken as prisoner was a resident by the name of Lot, the son of a man named Haran. Haran had a brother whose name was Abraham.

Abraham lived near what we now call Hebron, about seventeen miles south of the city known as Salem, that we now call Jerusalem. We’re told that someone who had escaped from Chedorlaomer forces found Abraham and told him that his nephew had been taken prisoner. Abraham gathered his trained men, 318 of them, and set off to find the army of Chedorlaomer and set his nephew free. Abraham knew that Chedorlaomer would be heading home to Elam, which was to the west in what is now Iran. He also knew that, instead of traveling west across miles of desert wilderness, the army would first go north along the Great Sea and then turn east to go around the desert. So Abraham and his 318 men began walking north.

One hundred and twenty miles later, near the city called Dan, Abraham’s trained men found the five joined armies of King Chedorlaomer. Rather than make the mistake the others had made, Abraham divided his men into groups that traveled through the night and surprised Chedolaomer’s army near Damascus. Chadolaomer’s army panicked and Abraham’s 318 men chased them to a place called Hobah. When the fighting was over, Genesis says that Abraham brought back all of the goods, and the people, and his nephew Lot.

As Abraham and his men walked south to go back home, there were celebrations as they traveled. The countries and families of those people Chedolamer had taken prisoner came out to meet Abraham to thank him for bringing their people home again. As Abraham passed the King’s Valley near the city of Salem, the King of Sodom came out to meet him.

Then Melchizedek arrived.

We don’t know much about Melchizedek, other than that he was supposedly the King of Salem. We don’t know who or where he came from, or what happened to him and where he went. We do know he was actually the High Priest of Salem, but the writers of Genesis called him a king because he was known as the founder of what would become the royal priesthood. And we know that as Abraham and the King of Sodom were meeting in the King’s Valley, Melchizedek came out of Salem bringing bread and wine, and a blessing for Abraham. We are told that, in return, Abraham gave him a gift of one-tenth of all of the goods that had been recaptured, and then they all went home.

From that point on, Melchizedek was only mentioned in one verse of Psalm 110, until we find him again in today’s passage from Hebrews, where he is mentioned nine times altogether. It just makes you wonder why, after all this time, the writer of Hebrews talked about him — and so much?

Just who the heck is Melchizedek and what does he have to do with us here today?

It might help to understand who the book of Hebrews was written by and who it was written to. First, it’s not like many of the other books we have that were written as letters to one specific church in one specific location. Hebrews was more of a sermon than a letter. It was written to those Gentiles and Jews who had joined the early church but were now facing some really difficult times. It was most likely written between the years 60 and 90 when organized persecutions of the church were underway. Beginning around 60 AD, in addition to the attacks from groups with other religions and philosophies, members of the church began to be persecuted by the Roman government. Up to that point, Rome had considered the Christians to be just another sect of Judaism and more of a local thing in a small corner of the Roman Empire. Things changed when Nero became the Roman emperor in the year 54 AD. Hearing the growing Christian community calling Jesus their king was something Nero saw as treason, and that had to be addressed. Whatever actually caused the great fire of Rome in the year 64 AD, Nero blamed it on the Christians as part of their goal to overthrow Rome for their own king. Being a Christian became a deadly thing to do.

Those arrested in Rome and accused of being Christian were given the opportunity to recant their faith and state loudly and clearly that Nero was their one and only king. Those who did not recant were made examples of. Rome knew how to make examples. Just over one hundred years before, a group of slaves had attempted to oppose Rome. As a result, the Appian Way, the road that reached three hundred miles between Rome and Brindisi, was lined on both sides with six thousand crosses, each holding a crucified slave. Rome was very good at making their point. Some people who refused to give up their Christian faith were tied, dipped in tubs of oil, and tied to poles in the main courtyard of Nero’s house. That night, those Christians were used as torches to provide the light for Nero’s parties. For more and more members of the church, It was just too dangerous to stay.

Staying in the church was made even more difficult as more people argued that even if they did remain true and sacrifice their lives for their faith, it wouldn’t do any good because Jesus was not the one who could really help them. He was great, yes, but there were others who were just as great or greater. For those with a Jewish background, there were many people of history who were remembered as the most truthful followers of God, and choosing the right one to follow would to win God’s favor. There was Moses. There was Abraham. There was David. And there were others, many of whom were high priests from the temple. For those who came to the church as gentiles, they were familiar with all of the different temples in town, each with their own high priest, some of whom were believed to have great understanding and power.

As a result, many of the members of the early church, even though they believed in Jesus, were still heard to proclaim, “I follow Moses!”, “I follow David!”, or they followed this high priest or that high priest. While Jesus was great, was he really great enough to die for?

We nod our heads and say, “Of course he is. That’s what Easter is all about!” But might there be at least some spark of doubt …? Picture it this way. You wake up in the morning to the sound of the door being broken down. You are bound and taken to a room filled with people dressed in uniforms and carrying weapons. Someone sitting in a big chair calls your name and says he is going to ask you a question and give you one chance to answer it. If you answer it correctly they will take you back home. If you answer it incorrectly, you are going to die. One chance. The question is, “Who do you believe Jesus is? A man, or a king?” What do you say?

I’m not asking that to try and be dramatic or to just make you uncomfortable. Sadly, that is exactly what is happening in too many places today where Christians understand how tempting it can be to put our hope elsewhere and walk away. Those are the people the writer of Hebrews was writing to. He was writing to people who were wondering if Jesus was really the one, or if one of those others might be the better choice. That’s why the writer wrote about the old high priest called Melchizedek.

Although very little is written in the Bible about Melchizedek, out of all of the people from history who were remembered as powerful people of the faith, Melchizedek stood at the top. Normally, when two important people met, the lesser important person gave a gift to the more important one. Who gave the gift when Abraham met Melchizedek? Abraham did. So who was even greater than Father Abraham? Melchizedek. Since many considered Abraham to be even more important than all the others like Moses and David, that meant Melchizedek was greater than all of them.

Some believed that since nothing was known about where Melchizedek came from or where he went after meeting Abraham, he was not just another high priest, but he was a heavenly being. sent from God to give Abraham that blessing he gave. Not only was he greater than all of the historic men of the faith, but he was greater than any other high priest from any other temple on earth. So, if you are looking for someone to put your faith in, Melchizedek is at the very top of that list.

The writer of Hebrews said,

We have this hope, a sure and steadfast anchor of the soul, a hope that enters the inner shrine behind the curtain, where Jesus, a forerunner on our behalf, has entered, having become a high priest forever according to the order of Melchizedek. (Hebrews 6:19-20)

Just to make his point, the writer reminded his readers about that curtain in the temple that separates the holiest room of the temple from the rest. No one passed that curtain into the holy of holies except the high priest, and he did that only once a year, very quickly, to replace candles and incense. But Jesus passed that curtain and entered that room, where no one else ever entered. Even the gentile members understood that because even their temples had their own protected, sacred rooms.

We are fortunate to come here today without the fear of being dragged into a room and being forced to make a life or death choice about Jesus. But we do have those moments when following him as his ambassador is a painful thing to do. Those moments when we feel that spark of a question: is he really the one?

Who the heck is Melchizedek? He’s the one who gives us the answer to our question.

Amen.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Ambassadors for Christ : sermons based on second lessons for Lent and Easter, by John B. Jamison