SCANDALOUS VICTORY

From Pastor Wade Jones

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Hebrews 2:10-18

This week we are going to look together at a passage from the book of Hebrews. Hebrews is a bit of an interesting book. We aren’t sure who wrote it (although there have been lots of educated guesses, including Paul, Barnabas, Apollos, and Priscilla). It’s hard to date (was it written before or after the fall of the temple in Jerusalem?). And we aren’t quite confident which Hebrews it was written to (refugees from Rome? The Hellenistic diaspora?). However, it has been accepted as part of inspired Scripture since very early in the history of the church. And, as interesting and helpful as all those details might be, they take a back seat to the role of the Holy Spirit in inspiring and preserving the texts He wanted the body of Christ to have as the revealed word of God. We are going to look at today’s passage without attempting to answer any of those questions, and we will still see some deep and powerful truths about Jesus Christ because of this text.

I will not keep myself anonymous, though. My name is Wade Jones, and I am glad to be back with you at New Joy. I’m a pastor at Priest Lake Christian Fellowship in Antioch, Tennessee as well as a friend and extended part of the Hilpert family. And this week I’m going to lead us through some time looking at Hebrews 2:10-18.

Let’s do a little bit of lead-up first. Without trying to solve all the historical questions around Hebrews, it does seem clear that the author – or maybe preacher, as this feels more like a written sermon than a traditional letter – at any rate, the writer is concerned with helping the readers (and us) come to a clear understanding of the superiority of the work God has done in Jesus. He is the Messiah of Israel, and He has gone beyond all Israel’s expectations for Messiah. So, in the first chapter of this sermon, the preacher compares the place of Jesus to the angelic messengers that are a part of Israel’s ancient and recent history. God has revealed many things throughout Israel’s history, but in Jesus, things have come to a critical point. Jesus does not just bear the message of YHWH; He is in Himself the Presence of YHWH. This is more than they had expected, and the preacher places a great deal of emphasis on the uniqueness of Jesus as a revealer of YHWH. If the listeners truly want to understand YHWH (as far as it is possible for any of us as humans), they are going to have to focus on Jesus. This idea permeates the letter, and hopefully it permeates our lives as well. When we have questions about God: His nature, His actions, His character, we need to begin by looking at Jesus and letting His revelation of God form the lenses through which we interpret anything else we know about God – even other things that God has revealed to us through His prophets and teachers. Jesus Christ is the beginning point for our understanding of God, who He is, and what He is doing. All of that is in mind as we turn to today’s passage. Let’s read that now together. (Hebrews 2:10-18)

10 For it was fitting for Him, for whom are all things and by whom are all things, in bringing many sons to glory, to make the captain of their salvation perfect through sufferings. 11 For both He who sanctifies and those who are being sanctified are all of one, for which reason He is not ashamed to call them brethren, 12 saying: “I will declare Your name to My brethren;
In the midst of the assembly I will sing praise to You.”

13 And again: “I will put My trust in Him.”

And again: “Here am I and the children whom God has given Me.”

14 Inasmuch then as the children have partaken of flesh and blood, He Himself likewise shared in the same, that through death He might destroy him who had the power of death, that is, the devil, 15 and release those who through fear of death were all their lifetime subject to bondage. 16 For indeed He does not give aid to angels, but He does give aid to the seed of Abraham. 17 Therefore, in all things He had to be made like His brethren, that He might be a merciful and faithful High Priest in things pertaining to God, to make propitiation for the sins of the people. 18 For in that He Himself has suffered, being tempted, He is able to aid those who are tempted.”

We have gotten so used to the suffering of Jesus that perhaps we forget what a stumbling block – a scandal – that was for many in the first century. Messiahs, Deliverers, and Heroes were not supposed to die. They were supposed to be victorious. And I think this passage remains important for His people today. We often want to avoid the scandal of a difficult or painful life in the belief that our identification with Jesus somehow has placed us above all that. The preacher of Hebrews does not share this belief and is pretty vested in helping the listeners grasp that their identification with Jesus is not a get-out-of-difficulty-and-suffering free card. In fact, difficulty and suffering are key components of our shared life with Jesus Christ. They are an essential part of the path to glory that God has for us.

And that is where the preacher begins in this passage. Jesus came to bring many sons (and daughters) – to bring many children to glory. Glory is our destiny in Christ, but let’s look at how Jesus gets us there. The God of the universe makes the “captain” – and we are going to come back to that word – perfect through suffering. Wait a second! How did Jesus need to be made perfect? Wasn’t He already perfect as God? Well, of course He was. The Greek word translated “made perfect” here carries with it the idea of maturity, of completion. The idea here is not of moral perfection, of sinlessness – Jesus already had that. But the work of salvation that the Father has sent Him to do required Jesus to grow and develop into that – not morally, but situationally. There were some things He needed to go through and experience in order to have the saving effect that He was sent to have. And a major component of that development and preparation came to Him through suffering. Not just the suffering of the crucifixion and all that led up to that, but the normal, everyday suffering that humans experience. It was critical for Jesus, in order to save humanity, to fully enter into humanity.

The preacher really takes seriously the union that Jesus is giving us with Himself. We are “of the same family” as Jesus (verse 11). We are His brothers (verse 12). We His children (verse 13). And we share our flesh and blood, the physical nature of our being, with Him (verse 14). He has been made fully like us in every possible way, except sin (verse 17). And a key part of that is His suffering. Again, not just the suffering of the Passion, but the suffering of enduring temptation. Look at verse eighteen, where the preacher specifically connects those two ideas. “For in that He Himself has suffered, being tempted, He is able to aid those who are tempted.” His ability to set us free in our temptation is connected to the truth that He suffered – that word is intentional – the pains of being tempted. I believe the preacher is saying that before the Incarnation, temptation wasn’t a part of the Son’s experience. James tells us that God does not tempt and is not tempted – but in the Word, the Son, becoming flesh, He made Himself subject to all that was and is part of fallen humanity, including the reality of temptation and the hardship that those temptations cause. Remember, being tempted is not a sin. It’s part of the normal fallen human experience. And going through that on a daily, weekly, monthly, yearly basis for His whole life – and yet never giving in to the temptation – was a part of the suffering of Jesus.

Why did all this matter? Why is it so important for Jesus to have become fully human? The early church wrestled with this a lot because it was such an odd idea. The ancient world had plenty of stories of gods taking on the appearance of a human (or some other creature), but it was unthinkable that these gods would subject themselves to the limits of humanity. And it was just as difficult for the Jews, who had worked so hard to come to the understanding that their God was unlike any creature, to get their heads around the idea that He had become a creature. I think it’s hard for us too. We tend to drift toward Jesus as God, drifting a bit above the ground, and only playacting at being human (if we are theologically conservative), or toward Jesus as man, inspired by God but not really divine (if we are theologically liberal). But the early church (and the orthodox church in all its varieties since then) correctly rejects both of those approaches as heresy. Not just a bad or sloppy idea, but a serious failure to grasp the gospel.

It is critical to our salvation and deliverance from all the consequences of the fall and our rebellion against God that Jesus remained fully God, and became fully human, undergoing all the normal pain, difficulty, temptation, and suffering that are part of the normal human experience. This equipped Him to do the Messianic work that He had come to do. Because in order to reunite us with Him as family, He had to set us free from the bondage we were in. He had to destroy the hold that death has had over us since the exile from the Garden of Eden.

Let’s come back to the word translated “captain” in verse ten, as I read from the New King James. The word, archegos, is one of those words that capture a variety of related ideas. You will see this word translated variously (and accurately) as author, pioneer, leader. In this passage, I love the significance that William Lane puts on the word by translating it as “champion.” That is, as the one who steps forward on behalf of someone else and identifies himself or herself fully with the needs of that someone else. I think about it in terms of a medieval trial by combat scenario.

Imagine, if you will, a poor elderly woman who has been wronged by the local baron. He has taken land that had been in her family for generations, and she has no one to stand up to him. Her husband is dead, her sons killed in wars, and now she will lose her inheritance altogether and there is nothing she can do to protect herself. She has the right to duel the corrupt baron to prove her claim, but what chance does she have against him when he’s a trained warrior and she can’t even lift a sword? And then, in front of the court, an unknown knight steps forward to identify himself as her champion. Her representative. Her defender against evil. And as the music rises to a crescendo, he defeats the evil baron in battle and removes the threat of loss hanging over the elderly woman’s head. That’s a nice story. I love watching those. And what the preacher is describing here is much more than that.

You see, brothers and sisters, we were designed to walk in ongoing, unbroken, complete fellowship with our God. We were created to spend our days and nights breathing His Presence in and out as easily as we fill our lungs with air. In communion with Him, we continually received the Life that flows from His Presence. But when we rebelled, we were cut off from that Life-giving Presence and became subject to death. Which is, of course, exactly what God had told us would happen, but I guess we just had to go and prove it for ourselves. And we, as created beings, are not inherently immortal. So, when we are cut off from God, we are going to die. As Adam and Eve found out, that death is not always instantaneous. But it is inevitable. And Jesus came to destroy the grip that death has had on us ever since that day.

But death could only be destroyed from the inside. Why is it that way? Honestly, I don’t know. There are things about the character of God and how He has to operate that I don’t fully grasp. Perhaps it is something like this. Death was designed to hold rebels in its grip. As such, it was unrelenting in its grip over humans, because we have all fallen into rebellion. Well, some of us tripped and fell into it, others of us have charged into it headlong. And once we have become rebels, alienating ourselves from God, the power of death over our lives was unbreakable. But what happens when Death grabs hold of someone who has not rebelled? Who has not broken that Life-giving covenant relationship with God? Who is, in fact, God Himself? What happens when the Source of all Life makes Himself susceptible to death? What happens when death occurs as an act of obedient submission to God instead of as a natural consequence of rebellion against God? Well, what happens is Death breaks. It can no longer function as it has to function. Life, in the Person of Jesus, is stronger than Death, and when He breaks the power of death, He is able to lead free from it all of us who are willing to come with Him.

What does it mean to lose the fear of death? How many decisions do people make because they are afraid if they don’t do this or that they will die? Esau comes to mind, but he was certainly not the last to give up his inheritance just to put off what felt like impending death a little longer. How many of us through the centuries, faced with the possibility of death, have been willing to compromise the calling of Christ? There is a reason that those who have become martyrs are celebrated in the history of church – they have lived out the truth that death no longer has power over us, because it is no longer the end. Sure, we may die. In fact, all of us will, unless He returns to us first. But death is no longer the end. We no longer go down to the grave to stay there. Instead, we go to the grave knowing that we have been joined to the One who has defeated death, and that as His brothers and sisters, we are utterly connected to a Life that Death cannot defeat. And that frees us to make decisions that wouldn’t make sense if all we had was this life: these fifty or seventy or even one hundred years. If this is it, if death is the end, then let’s eat, drink and be merry. Let’s get all we can for ourselves because the end is coming. But Jesus has set us free from the need to do that. Instead, we can live lives joined to Him, knowing that death, even though it may be a painful interruption, is just that – an interruption to a Life that flows from our Re-Union with God.

I’ll finish with one of the other possible translations of that word archegos. Pioneer. The one who goes into an unexplored wilderness and creates a trail. He makes it possible for others to follow Him. Now, none of those who follow created the trail. They are following the signs and markings that the pioneer left. And if they are wise, they will follow the trail markings carefully. Those incoming travelers want and need to walk in the footsteps left by the pioneer so that they can arrive at their destination.

That’s part of what the preacher is calling the listeners to do. Follow Jesus. Stay on course. The preacher will come back to this theme over and over throughout this sermon. Jesus, our older brother, our champion, our pioneer, has blazed a trail for us to follow. He blazed it with suffering. He blazed it with obedience. He blazed it with mercy and faithfulness. He blazed it for them. And He blazed it for us. It is now incumbent upon us, as it was for the first hearers of this sermon, to resolve to continue to walk in the footsteps of Jesus. We cannot create the trail. But we can follow it because He has made us able to follow it. He is the Maker of the trail, the Keeper of the trail, and the Source of our ability to walk the trail. All He asks of us is the willingness to persevere, to accept His victory over death as our Champion, and to trust that He knows where He is going and we should follow Him.

This week, will you commit each day to follow the trail He has blazed? To receive His help in your temptation and His atonement for your sin? The victory is won. Now it’s our responsibility to walk in it.

PHILIPPIANS #6: CITIZENS OF THE GOSPEL

We are called, first an foremost, to live as citizens of the gospel of Jesus Christ, in a way that shows the rest of the world that Jesus is worthy. That includes being “family” to one another, sticking with each other throughout all the ups and downs, and also it includes suffering as we “fight the good fight of faith.”

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Philippians #6. Philippians 1:27-30

27 Only let your manner of life be worthy of the gospel of Christ, so that whether I come and see you or am absent, I may hear of you that you are standing firm in one spirit, with one mind striving side by side for the faith of the gospel, 28 and not frightened in anything by your opponents. This is a clear sign to them of their destruction, but of your salvation, and that from God. 29 For it has been granted to you that for the sake of Christ you should not only believe in him but also suffer for his sake, 30 engaged in the same conflict that you saw I had and now hear that I still have. (Philippians 1:27-30, ESV)

Translation is always tricky, because some languages have words that don’t really exist in other ones. In verse 27, “let your manner of life” is one word, “citizen,” but as a verb. It would be sort of like: “Citizen in a way that is worthy of the gospel of Christ.” I draw this out because it was important to the first readers of this letter. Remember, the city of Philippi was a Roman colony. A citizen of Philippi was a citizen of Rome. This was a big deal to most of the people who lived in Philippi. They would have been quite proud of their status as citizens of Rome. But Paul reminds the Christians there that they are, before anything else, citizens of the Kingdom of Jesus Christ. The way they are to “citizen” is to be worthy of the good news of Jesus Christ. The New Living Translation does pretty well with this:

27 Above all, you must live as citizens of heaven, conducting yourselves in a manner worthy of the Good News about Christ. (Philippians 1:27, NLT)

The CSB also gets at the citizen idea, but most other translations don’t. I think this is very relevant also to Americans in the 21st century. When Philippians was written, the preeminent world power was Rome. They were proud Romans. Today, the preeminent world power is the United States. I know a lot of people are proud to be American. That’s not wrong, in its place. But as Christians, our first citizenship, our primary citizenship is as the people of Jesus Christ. Our first concern should be how to live as good citizens of the gospel. It is not the same thing as being citizens of Rome or citizens of America. If and when there is a conflict between the two, we need to remember that our primary citizenship is with Jesus.

I see both conservative and progressive Christians getting this wrong all the time. Conservatives sometimes think that being American and being Christian are the same thing, and there is no conflict between the two. But at times, the gospel calls us to a different kind of life than America does. Sometimes, people think that being patriotic about America automatically is the same as being a good Christian. At other times, people who are confused about this try to use government to accomplish some of the purposes of the gospel. They want the government to outlaw abortion, and to recognize public prayer and the ten commandments and so on.

On the other hand, progressives also seem to be confused about it. Right now there are a lot of more progressive Christians pointing out that the Bible teaches us to welcome immigrants and foreigners. It does indeed. I do believe we Christians should extend kindness and generosity to immigrants and refugees, because in doing so, we show them practically that God loves them. However, there is a huge difference between showing kindness to refugees on the one hand, and actively interfering with government agents who are lawfully doing their duty. My point is this: Christian nationalism exists on both the right and left sides of the political spectrum. But we are not primarily called to live as Americans who happen to be Christians. We are called to live first and foremost as Christians who happen to live in America. Our true citizenship is in the gospel of Jesus Christ.

Should we Christians oppose abortion? Yes. Should we welcome immigrants? Also yes. But I think it is a mistake to start thinking that means that our primary call as Christians is to make our government do certain things. We ourselves, as followers of Jesus, should try to help unwed mothers, to give them options other than abortion. We should also be clear about the Bible’s teaching on sex, with the hope of reducing the number of women who become unwed mothers in the first place. But I’m not sure we’re supposed to get the United States government to do it for us. In the same way, we should welcome people who come here from other places, looking for a better life. We should try to lead them to Jesus with our kindness and generosity towards them. But I think it’s a mistake to try and get the government to do this work for us. In addition, there is no country in the world where people from other places are simply allowed to come in, no questions asked. We should not oppose reasonable immigration laws—that does not seem to me to be part of what it means to be a citizen of Christ’s kingdom.

We are called to live our values as citizens of Christ’s kingdom. What our country does or doesn’t do shouldn’t change our commitment to that. We need to be careful not to think that being a good American and being a good Christian are always and automatically the same thing. In fact, we should expect at times that our way of life looks strange to those who do not follow Jesus.

Most especially, we are not called to live for the things everyone else lives for. The American Dream is not the same thing as citizenship in Christ. A lot of people around us live to earn more money, with the goal of getting all the stuff they want to have, and also gaining financial security and leisure  time. While, perhaps, this can be done in a way that is not sinful, we need to be clear that we are called to seek first the kingdom of God, and to not put our hope in wealth.

6 But godliness with contentment is great gain, 7 for we brought nothing into the world, and we cannot take anything out of the world. 8 But if we have food and clothing, with these we will be content. 9 But those who desire to be rich fall into temptation, into a snare, into many senseless and harmful desires that plunge people into ruin and destruction. 10 For the love of money is a root of all kinds of evils. It is through this craving that some have wandered away from the faith and pierced themselves with many pangs.
11 But as for you, O man of God, flee these things. Pursue righteousness, godliness, faith, love, steadfastness, gentleness. 12 Fight the good fight of the faith. Take hold of the eternal life to which you were called and about which you made the good confession in the presence of many witnesses. (1 Timothy 6:6-12, ESV)

And:

17 As for the rich in this present age, charge them not to be haughty, nor to set their hopes on the uncertainty of riches, but on God, who richly provides us with everything to enjoy. 18 They are to do good, to be rich in good works, to be generous and ready to share, 19 thus storing up treasure for themselves as a good foundation for the future, so that they may take hold of that which is truly life. (1 Timothy 6:17-19, ESV)

To be clear then, even in the New Testament, there were Christians who had a fair amount of worldly wealth, so simply having it is not necessarily a sin. But all of them (and us) are warned not to set our hopes on riches. Of course, this is exactly what so many people do. They spend their lives trying to acquire more because their hopes and dreams are all tied up with wealth. Rich people are warned to hope only in Christ not in their wealth, and to use their worldly wealth to be generous, and for the purposes of Christ. In that way, we build “eternal wealth.” This is part of being a citizen of Christ’s kingdom, rather than the world. We don’t live for more stuff, more money, or more of the dreams that money can buy. That alone will make us look very different from the people around us.

Now, all of this can sound like we have to behave in certain ways in order to be good Christians. But that’s not the point at all. I mentioned this earlier in the series on Philippians: The way we behave as disciples of Jesus can have an impact on what other people think about Jesus. We should not let our lives or behavior become an obstacle to other people following Jesus. We won’t be perfect of course, and part of following Jesus involves being honest about our failures.

Paul particularly wants the Philippians to be “standing firm in one spirit, with one mind striving side by side for the faith of the gospel, and not frightened in anything by your opponents.”

Reading between the lines, it appears that there was some internal strife in the church at Philippi. He urges them here to be “of one mind, striving side by side.” In chapter two he tells them to be of one accord, and one mind. He tells them to be humble, like Jesus, and to not insist on their own honor. In 4:2, he urges two women: Euodia and Syntyche, to figure out how to get along. Here, his concern is that they present a unified front to the world, and to fear nothing.

I do think we in the 21st century do not really understand how much the culture was communally oriented in New Testament times. Becoming a Christian sometimes meant that you were now cut off from parts of your community. You no longer worshipped with others at the shrine of a false god. Family members might reject you. Your fellow Christians became your family, your “people.” You did life together with others who were citizens of the gospel of Jesus Christ.

I still wish for all of the churches in our Life Together Churches network to become more like this. We need to look beyond just meeting together once a week. We should be involved with each other’s lives. Our house church should be “our people.” We live in an individualistic culture, so this is a bit of a stretch for us, but I do think that when the church is also our “family,” that is a testimony to those who are not Christians. In fact, Paul says as much. He says that when the Philippian believers stand together, with one spirit and soul, without fear, it is a sign to everyone else of the truth of the gospel.

Next, comes verses 29-30:

29 For it has been granted to you that for the sake of Christ you should not only believe in him but also suffer for his sake, 30 engaged in the same conflict that you saw I had and now hear that I still have.

This is both scary, and comforting. Suffering is a normal part of what it means to be a Christian. Until about eighty years ago, this would not have been considered a very big deal. Virtually everyone in all of the history of the world until about 1950 understood that suffering is a normal part of life. People outside of the Western world still understand this. However, during the past eighty years, huge advances in modern medicine, and technologies of all kinds, have made life much easier. Unprecedented economic growth has led to an unprecedented quality of life. But we are living in an ignorant bubble, compared to the rest of the world, and the rest of history. What is abnormal is to go through life without major suffering. Today’s “baby-boomers” are the first generation in the history of the world to experience life in that way.

Some Christians, who don’t like the talk about suffering, claim that Paul is talking about persecution. After all, he says that the Philippians are engaged in the same conflict that Paul himself is engaged in. Isn’t that persecution? Not exactly. The Greek word for “conflict” in v. 30 is found in only a few other places in the New Testament. It doesn’t necessarily mean persecution. In 1 Timothy 6:12, and 2 Timothy 4:7 Paul used that word to describe “the good fight of faith;” in other words, in a very broad and general way, the “fight” of being a Christian in an ungodly world. The struggle to hold on to Jesus with so many things pulling us away. In Hebrews 12:1, where it says, “let us run the race set before us,” race is the same word. So Paul isn’t talking just about persecution. He is talking about all of the suffering and trials of this life  which we encounter as followers of Jesus. We’ll look at this again when Paul talks about Epaphroditus. Many people suffer. But if we are followers of Jesus, citizens of his Kingdom, all of our suffering is used to draw us closer to him, and to show the world more about him.

It is normal to suffer as we “fight the fight of faith,” living as Jesus-followers in a world that has largely rejected him. This is part of what it means to be a Christian, period. But it is also good news.  There isn’t something “cosmically wrong” when we find ourselves in suffering—this is normal. And thousands of generations of Christians before us have suffered as they follow the Lord, and in doing so provided us with courageous examples.

Let the Holy Spirit speak to you right now through these scriptures.