"Then He Sat Down"
Foundational to the Letter to the Hebrews is the appointment of Jesus as our High Priest, and this was due especially to his obedience “unto death” whereby he achieved the “purification of sins.” In his sufferings, he was “perfected,” and in his resurrection, God vindicated his sacrifice by seating him at the “right hand of the Majesty on High,” where he now sits enthroned interceding on our behalf. The stress is not on his position as the Royal Son, as true as that is, but on his priestly status and ministry for his people.
[Photo by Benjaminrobyn Jespersen on Unsplash] |
The description of him “sitting down” contrasts his priesthood with that of the Levitical High Priest who NEVER sat down after entering the Holy of Holies. He STOOD in the inner sanctum and entered it only on the annual Day of Atonement for a very brief period. However, the “Son” sat down in the Greater Sanctuary “in the heavens,” and there he remains ministering for his Assembly.
Jesus was appointed as our High Priest
after he “tasted death.” God “perfected”
or made him “complete through suffering.” The term “suffering”
refers primarily to his death by which
he “paralyzed him who held the dominion of death, the Devil.” To
accomplish this, he was “obliged in every way to be made like his brethren
so that he might become a merciful and faithful high priest.” In short, he
was fully human - (Hebrews 2:14-18).
In the “days of his flesh,” Jesus offered
up supplications to the one who was able to save him from death. Though God hearkened
to him because of his devoutness, and “even though he was a Son, yet he learned obedience from what things he
suffered.” In this way, he was perfected or “made complete” - (Matthew
26:36-46).
Not only was he “made perfect” through
his sufferings and death, but he also “became
to all those who obey him the Author of everlasting salvation.” His priestly
status and the “purification of our sins” achieved by him are based on
his obedience and death.
We as his disciples have “a mighty consolation…an anchor of the soul, both
secure and firm,” and this is because our “forerunner” entered
the interior of the “Sanctuary” through the “veil,” where he sits
ministering for us to this very day. He “became
the High Priest forever according to the rank of Melchizedek,” a position
he did not hold before his death- (Hebrews 6:18-20, Psalm 110:4).
As our “High Priest,” he “became the surety of a covenant” that is
vastly superior to anything provided by the Levitical system. His appointment as
“High Priest” occurred when he “sat down on the right hand of
the throne of the Majesty in the heavens” following his resurrection.
As the High Priest after the “order of
Melchizedek,” he attained “a more distinguished public ministry” than
any of the Levitical priests ever did or could, and he became the “mediator
of the better covenant,” one based on “better promises.”
TABERNACLE, COVENANT, SACRIFICE
Jesus approached the presence of God “as
High Priest… through the greater and more perfect tabernacle,” one not made-by-handS. Moreover, “through
his own blood, he entered once for all, having discovered everlasting
redemption.”
The reference to “blood” stresses the reality of his death - He died a genuine human death. Through the “blood of the Christ who offered himself unspotted to God through an everlasting spirit,” and the resulting “New Covenant,” he now purifies our conscience from dead works so we can render divine service to God - (Hebrews 8:1-13).
The reference to the “blood of Christ”
means that he was able to enter the greater Tabernacle “once-for-all.” In
contrast to the “first covenant” with its repeated animal sacrifices and
annual Day of Atonement, the heavenly counterpart of the Tabernacle needed to be established “with better sacrifices than these,” namely, that
of the “Son.” The result was his entry “into heaven itself” where
he now is being “manifested before the face of God for us.”
Because of his superior sacrifice, Jesus did not need to “offer himself often,” unlike the Levitical priests with their
repeated animal sacrifices. Instead, “once-for-all,
upon a conjunction of the ages, for a setting aside of sin through means of his
sacrifice,” he offered himself. Thus, “having been offered once for all
for the bearing of the sins of many,” he also will appear a second time, “apart from sin
to them who eagerly wait for him for salvation.”
His return will be “apart from sin”
since he has dealt decisively with it in his past death. There will be no
further sacrifice for sin (“there remains no more a sacrifice for sins”), which is why it is “appointed to men
once to die, and then comes judgment.” This is also why apostasy is such a
serious offense in Hebrews - (Hebrews 9:27-28, 10:26).
[Photo by Michael on Unsplash] |
We are made holy “through the offering of the body of Jesus Christ ONCE-FOR-All.” Unlike every other priest who must “stand daily publicly ministering and continually offering the same sacrifices,” Jesus “offered one sacrifice for sins forevermore,” after which, he “sat down on the right hand of God.”
By his “one offering,” he achieved
the “purification of sin” and “perfected forevermore those who are being
made holy,” and he became our “faithful High Priest” who intercedes continually
for us. His “perfection” was accomplished through his obedience,
suffering, and death, and God vindicated him by raising Jesus from the dead and
SEATING HIM at His “right hand.”
Thus, the Letter to the Hebrews bases
the present high priestly status of the Son and our deliverance from sin’s stain
and bondage to the “fear of death” and the Devil on the historical events of his obedience, death, and resurrection.
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