Wednesday, August 21, 2024

Perfect Hight Priest - Part II

 By Danny Rush

Read Hebrews 5

As you know, Hebrews, being a New Testament book, was written after the life, crucifixion, and resurrection of Jesus Christ. What we’re getting here in this first section of chapter 5 should be to us a great joy in realizing that we don’t have the required works to get to atonement that people did in the Old Testament. Our great high priest, Jesus Christ, fulfilled the law and has made the final atoning sacrifice by which we are given salvation. Through Jesus, we have a direct relationship with our heavenly Father.

The writer of Hebrews starts chapter 5 in verse 1 by saying “For every high priest taken from among men is appointed on behalf of men in things pertaining to God, in order to offer both gifts and sacrifices for sins;”. There’s an important distinction being made here in that this high priest is a MAN, an EARTHLY being. Contrast this with what we covered last week in our study of chapter 4 in that “WE have a great high priest who has passed through the heavens, Jesus the Son of God”. That’s chapter 4 verse 14.

Also of note is that an earthly high priest is TAKEN from among men and APPOINTED on behalf of men in things pertaining to God. The position of high priest wasn’t one that just any man could hold. He had to be of the line of Aaron, or, TAKEN from the line of Aaron, as it was ORDAINED by God, or, APPOINTED by God, and once in the position there were strict guidelines to adhere to.

Just to mention a few…Leviticus 21:10-12 says, “The high priest, the one among his brothers who has had the anointing oil poured on his head (remember just a few weeks back in Hebrews 1:9 when God says of Jesus, “You have loved righteousness and hated lawlessness; therefore God, Your God, has anointed You with the oil of gladness above Your companions.”) There’s some interesting writing by Charles Spurgeon from way back in 1876 on this topic noting that the use of the term “anointed with oil” is likened to the pouring out of the Holy Spirit on someone.

With that in mind, let’s start over with these few verses from Leviticus, “The high priest, the one among his brothers who has had the anointing oil poured on his head (was given the holy spirit), and who has been ordained to wear the priestly garments, must not let his hair become unkempt or tear his clothes. He must not enter a place where there is a dead body. He must not make himself unclean, even for his father or mother, nor leave the sanctuary of his God or desecrate it, because he has been DEDICATED by the ANOINTING OIL (given the Holy Spirit) OF HIS GOD. I am the LORD”, God says. Think of these cautions against defilement as being similar to keeping your sacrificial lamb spotless and without defect.

A defective lamb would not be an acceptable atonement, just as a defiled high priest would not be acceptable to come before God. The penalty for doing so would be death. As you may know from Jewish tradition, they would tie a rope to the high priest so that if he were struck down, they could pull him out of that most holy part of the temple, the Holy of Holies. Being that they themselves couldn’t enter or they’d be struck down also.

Leviticus 21:16-17 goes on to say, “The LORD said to Moses, “Say to Aaron: ‘For the generations to come none of your descendants who has a defect may come near to offer the food of his God”.

So, let’s talk about the first high priest…

God himself told Moses to appoint Aaron (his brother) as the first high priest. This special role was to act as mediator between the people and God. Once a year, the high priest entered the Holy of Holies to offer gifts and sacrifices for sin. You see, this was where the Ark of the Covenant was kept. And in the Ark of the Covenant was the inscribed law, given to Moses directly from God the father. What better place to honor God and make atonement for sin?

Entering the sanctuary, the high priest took with him the blood of sacrificial lambs, to atone for the sins of the people. This included himself as all MEN are fallible. For the ceremony, he wore holy vestments that matched the materials that decorated the Holy of Holies. I’ll let you look into Leviticus 16:1-34 for more description on this.

Although Scripture describes Aaron as a holy man, he did have flaws. For example, he led the Israelites in worshipping a golden calf instead of God. We see this in Exodus 32 when the Israelites, feeling Moses was away for too long while he was up on the mountain talking with God, asked Aaron to make them a new god. He took their golden jewelry and made a golden calf for them. The golden calf was an idol that the people worshiped instead of the one true God. This was just shortly after they all entered into a covenant with God that they would keep His commandments, be his people, "His holy representatives to the other nations of the earth”, and He would be their God.

I bring this up because of verses 2-3 of Hebrews 5 which says of the earthly high priest, “he can deal gently with the ignorant and misguided, since he himself also is beset with weakness; and because of it he is obligated to offer sacrifices for sins, as for the people, so also for himself.”

Aaron, had a moment of weakness in succumbing to the wants of the people in making them an idol to worship. It was moments of weakness such as this that disallowed him from being able to enter the promised land. And along with Aaron, that whole generation of Gods own people were disallowed from entering the promised land because of their disobedience and unbelief. Hence the 40 years they wondered in the wilderness, giving time for every one of that generation to perish, leaving their children to inherit Gods promise, His rest. (11-day trip)

Man, on his own, is weak when faced with temptation. This is no different even for a high priest. A human priest was faced with all the same temptations and trials that any other man is faced with and is therefore able to sympathize with human weaknesses. But this is exactly why Jesus had to come as a man, to be tempted with all the things we’re tempted with, to face all the trials we face. And to be an example for us, yes, but even more than that, to be a GREAT HIGH PRIEST for us that we recognize can fully sympathize with our weakness.

Therefore, we cannot say that our great high priest doesn’t really understand what we’re going through. He’s lived this life. We can’t say he doesn’t know just how hard it is to live on this earth. He lived here. We can’t say he doesn’t know how hard it is to get by on what little we have. He lived a life of poverty. And we cannot say our punishments for disobedience seem unfair when we’re not living by Him as we should. He took our just punishment upon himself and DIED for our sins WHILE WE WERE STILL SINNERS.  

JESUS IS OUR PERFECT HIGH PRIEST. He is Gods own son and “a priest forever according to the order of Melchizedek”. What does this mean, a priest forever in the order of Melchizedek? Melchizedek, you should remember, is the priest king that met Abraham and blessed him while he was returning from his victory over four mighty kings armies using only a relatively small group of choice men. This victory was in saving his nephew Lot and all that were taken captive with him. Melchizedek’s name is literally translated King of Righteousness.  

He is thought to have lived a prefect life and is an architype of Christ. Depending on how far you might want to go in your research of Melchizedek, some will say he may have been and earlier incarnation of Christ, citing that this meeting between Melchizedek and Abraham is what Jesus was talking about in John 8:56 when Jesus says, “Your father Abraham was overjoyed that he would see My day, and he saw it and rejoiced”. I’ll leave it to you to investigate it. That rabbit hole gets deep.

Regardless of who he was, or could have been, there’s something key here that we need to recognize. Melchizedek was NOT of the line of Aaron. In fact, he came generations before there was a line of Aaron. His priesthood predated Aaron, and to add to that, he was the King of Salem, later known as Jerusalem. By now, I imagine you are seeing as I am that Melchizedek was at least a picture of what Christ was to be, a priest and King.

So now for the perfect high priest…

We have a perfect high priest in Christ that has not only lived as a man, and so can sympathize with our weakness, but looking back at chapter 4 verse 14, “one who has passed through the heavens”.

Hebrews 5:7 goes on to say, “In the days of His flesh, He offered up both prayers and supplications with loud crying and tears to the One able to save Him from death, and He was heard because of His piety.” Jesus was not only tempted as we are, but He also suffered as we do. Even more to the point of surpassing any suffering we may experience as he died to take away our sin. Through his suffering, Jesus cried loudly, his cheeks likely wet with tears, and he offered prayers and supplication. But who were His prayers for? Maybe for Himself to be saved from His suffering? Well, yes, He was quite grieved knowing the pain and sorrow He faced, but most often His prayers were for the people of that time, and for all of us today.

What was one of Jesus’s last prayers as he hung on the cross, suffering and dying so that we may have new life? He prayed “Father forgive them, for they know not what they do.” He could have easily saved himself, being the son of God, but as verse 8 says “Although He was a Son, He learned obedience from the things which He suffered.” Jesus knew full well what his time on this earth was for and why he was to endure his suffering and learn obedience. Ultimately, it was for our salvation.

Would we, being human, and fickle as we are, have faith to believe in Jesus as we do now if it weren’t for the life we know Jesus to have lived, knowing now that he was fully man, and is fully God? Maybe we can’t answer that given what we know now, but this is exactly what the Hebrew people at the time of this writing were wrestling with. What the writer is trying to convey to them here is that we DO have a great high priest who HAS fulfilled everything they spent their lives learning. Jesus fulfilled all their customs and ways of life that they were TRYING to live out, albeit not with great success.  

I love this verse 9, it says “And having been made perfect, He became to all those who obey Him the source of eternal salvation.” JESUS, IS, the source of our eternal salvation. How do we get to the father? How do we get to his rest like we talked about last week? How do we get to OUR promised land, our inheritance? ONLY through Jesus. What does Jesus say in John 14:6? “I am the way, and the truth, and the life; no one comes to the Father but through Me.” JESUS is the source of our salvation.

We cannot live by following examples of disobedience and unbelief. Over the last couple of weeks, the writer is using this example of disobedience and unbelief by God's own chosen people to make a point to the Hebrew people of his day and is valid for us today. Even though the chosen people who witnessed God's plagues on Pharaoh, were saved from Egypt, witnessed a guiding pillar of smoke by day and fire by night, witnessed the parting of the Red Sea and the drowning of Pharaoh's army, witnessed food and water seemingly appear from nowhere, they still chose to worship a golden calf and God cursed them because of it.

Even in knowing this history very well, some of the Hebrew people of this day are found to be in disobedience just the same. For the many signs and wonders that Jesus performed, and the prophecies he fulfilled, they couldn’t wrap their heads around him being the Messiah they had been waiting for. They were having trouble letting go of their traditions which told them that their works are what would qualify them to enter God's rest. They didn’t believe that Jesus was the fulfillment of all those things and that God’s grace, and having faith in Him is what would bring them to salvation. As in Ephesians 2:8-9, “For by grace you have been saved through faith; and that not of yourselves, it is the gift of God; not as a result of works, so that no one may boast.”

We may not have personally witnessed Jesus’s many miracles in our day, but we have this book of the past, which has been proven true time and again, which still holds true for us today, and which promises us the result of our salvation in the future. STAY in the word of God, ENCOURAGE others to do the same, and BELIEVE that our PERFECT HIGH PRIEST continues to offer salvation to all who believe.

Amen.

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