Tag Archives: Hebrews

Jesus Learned Obedience Through Suffering

Although he was a Son, he learned obedience through what he suffered. ~HEBREWS 5:8

This verse has intrigued me for many years.

Jesus learned obedience through suffering.

I have sat with this single sentence for almost three weeks now, and feel that my thoughts still have yet to coalesce into any sort of non-ambiguous distilled formation worthy of sharing.

But there’s so much here, so much I’ve poured over, thought about, prayed through that I desire to share….so I will simply start putting down thoughts in hopes that Spirit will move if this is of God, and stop me if it is not.

I’m blown away by the fact that Jesus had to learn what it meant to be obedient. Think about that thought alone for a second! He became acquainted with what it was to obey in the face of suffering, to obey even when that very obedience was the cause of harm to Himself.

He had to overcome and override His (God-given?) human desires whenever they were at odds with the Father’s will and plan for His life. He took on human desires to fully identify with us. Along with humanity came temptation and weakness. So it seems there must have been times when he humanly wanted something other than what the Father had in store for Him. The most obvious scenario we could point to is having to override that innate sense of survival when He was called upon to give up His life, and in a most cruel manner.

In my study of this verse, one theme that kept coming up across the different commentaries was this idea of reverential submission. William Barclay had a really thoughtful insight on this topic: “Jesus learned from all His experiences because he met them all with reverence.” I don’t believe I have ever thought of that exact idea before. Jesus was always, without fail, looking to His Father, deferring, trusting, obeying. So therefore, in every situation of His earthly life He was learning since he greeted each and every circumstance with reverence and submission. His human mind and body must have possessed urges, because of how complete was His identification with us flesh and blood beings. Urges to play it safe, to do whatever His flesh messaged Him was good to do and pleasing for Himself. Temptation and weakness are not sins. But they are challenging to deal with as humans. And He dealt. So focused was He on Father in every situation, and on learning His will more completely, that He never succumbed to allowing Himself to be overwhelmed with what this life threw at Him.

In thinking of this, I was reminded of what C.S. Lewis said about temptation with regard to Christ in his book Mere Christianity. If you think Jesus does not understand our plight because He never sinned, think again:

A silly idea is current that good people do not know what temptation means. This is an obvious lie. Only those who try to resist temptation know how strong it is….A man who gives in to temptation after five minutes simply does not know what it would have been like an hour later. That is why bad people, in one sense, know very little about badness. They have lived a sheltered life by always giving in. We never find out the strength of the evil impulse inside us until we try to fight it: and Christ, because he was the only man who never yielded to temptation, is also the only man who knows to the full what temptation means–the only complete realist.

It’s like if there was a CrossFit contest with a 40 day course, Jesus would have been the only one to ever finish it. How foolish it would be for someone who tapped out after day 6 to say, “You don’t know what this course is like; you don’t understand how hard this is!”

“Have You Read the Book of Hebrews Lately?”

What We Crazy Christians Believe

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Have you ever gone through the book of Hebrews? My goodness, it’s quite the manifesto. I’m not sure what the word “manifesto” means, but it seems a majestic word which this epistle is worthy of!

At the beginning of 2015 I felt strongly drawn to study/meditate through Hebrews, and it has been amazingly awesome and rewarding. It feels it is time to share the awesomeness of this deep well of cosmic truth and reality.

If I were a preacher about to preach through Hebrews, I would title the sermon series “What We Crazy Christians Believe.”

This epistle (fancy word for “letter”) was written to Christians most likely in Rome around the mid 60s (not 1960s). Persecution was very much on the rise just for being Christian, and even threat of death was looming. Pause for a second–WE CANNOT RELATE TO THIS. Stop and think about this. You may have someone come to your house tonite and take you to prison or just shoot you in the head. For being a follower of Jesus. Ok, un-pause.

Understandably, some of these Christians were losing their faith, thinking of turning away from it all, asking themselves, “What’s the point?” To say the least, these Christ followers needed some encouragement. Encouragement to keep going and persevere in their faith. And this writer delivers the amazing letter we call Hebrews to help bolster their commitment to Christ by reiterating what we believe, in Whom we believe, and why we believe. They were discouraged and were slipping into a spiritual lethargy which could lead to abandoning their Christian confession altogether. Many were thinking of just going back to their old way of Judaism which was safer and more comfortable than this new wacky thing called Christianity.

Though our circumstances are much different, for which I am very thankful, the principles are the same are they not? We are lulled into spiritual lethargy via our surroundings. We are tempted to go back to our old comfortable ways, no matter how destructive. What’s the point? Why pursue Christ? We have all we need here in America don’t we? Plenty of food, clothing, housing, friends, shopping, sports, churches…you name it, we got it and plenty of it! We do not need to depend on God for much of anything here and today.

Or do we?

Perhaps we don’t know what we’re missing due to the numbing effects of the great idol of comfort and convenience at whose altar we bow low, reverently, and consistently.

If we intimately knew the greatness of Christ in even the smallest measure, we would bow the knee to Him bemoaning every second we wasted before we did so.

Persecution and a blurred picture of Jesus were leading to the drifting of right thinking and living for these early Christians. Therefore, the author’s challenge was to encourage a group of discouraged believers drifting from real Christianity by bolstering their commitment to draw near to God and to endure in commitment to Christ.

What is so beautiful about this letter is that the answer, at the end of the day, is to simply draw near to God and find pleasure in His presence–which was won for us through Jesus. Jesus died to bring us close to God and be with Him in a real experiential way.

That alone is what heals and undergirds perseverance. We just encourage each other in this simple endeavor. No one gives peace but the Prince of Peace.

God with us.

Drawing near to Him who is already there, open-armed, waiting for you to do so.

That is Life, and Life abundant indeed.

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In the Name of Jesus,
Soli Deo Gloria