Exaltation of the Son
Jesus is the Son who is exalted after his suffering and death to become our sovereign and faithful High Priest.
A key theme
in Hebrews is the elevation of the “Son” as the result of
his obedient death. In his sufferings, was “perfected,” and in his
resurrection, God vindicated him and exalted him to “sit down” at the “right
hand of the majesty on high” where he intercedes for his people.
The letter builds its case with a series of
comparisons between the past revelations of God and his supreme “word spoken
in the Son.” It does not denigrate the past “words spoken in the
prophets.” They originated with God but were partial, promissory, and incomplete.
Hebrews uses these comparisons to stress the vast superiority of the
final “word” that God now “speaks” in His Son.
Though the Law was mediated by mighty
angels and accompanied by “scorching fire and gloom and mist and tempest,” the word unveiled in Jesus is vastly
superior to all its predecessors.
SUPERIOR TO ANGELS
Jesus “became
superior to the angels, having inherited a more distinguished name.” To “inherit”
means a change in condition and status. The letter validates this proposition by
citing and combining two Old Testament passages in its first chapter:
- (Hebrews 1:5) - “For to which of the angels said he at any time: You are my Son, I, this day, have begotten you, and again, I will become his father, and he shall become my Son?” - (Psalm 2:7, 2 Samuel 7:14).
“This day” translates the emphatic adverb
sémeron, and it points to a specific
time when Jesus was appointed by Yahweh. At no point did God ever say this to
any angel. He only declares it to His “Son.” And because he “loves righteousness and hates lawlessness,” God has “anointed him
with the oil of exultation beyond his partners.”
The letter’s opening paragraph concludes by
comparing the “Son” to the angels, using a passage from the Psalms that is
one of the letter’s chief proof texts:
- (Psalm 110:1) - “But to which of the angels has he said at any time: Sit at my right hand until I make your foes your footstool?”
Since Jesus has been appointed sovereign
over all things, a position no angel ever received, by definition, he is
superior to even the highest angel.
The first comparison concludes with an exhortation
not to abandon the things believers have received from the “Son.” And
since his word is supreme, to disregard it will result in far worse punishment
than any of the proscribed penalties for breaking the Mosaic Law - (Hebrews
2:1-4).
PERFECTING THE SON
All things have been subjected beneath him,
and God “left to him nothing un-subjected.” While not yet do we see all
things subjected to him - “We do see Jesus made some little less than
angels; by reason of the suffering of death, crowned with glory and honor, to
the end, that by the grace of God on behalf of everyone he should taste of
death.”
And we are told when his exaltation occurred
– at the time that he “tasted death.” But first, God determined to
perfect or “complete” him “through suffering.” His need to attain “perfection” points
to a change or transition in his condition and status, and apparently, one
that was achieved through “suffering” and death.
In the letter, his “suffering” refers to the death by which he “paralyzed him who held the dominion of death, the Devil,” which also released all men who “by fear of death, were all their lives liable to bondage.”
To achieve victory over Satan and death,
Jesus “was obliged in every way to be made like his brethren so that he
might become a merciful and faithful high priest.” The Greek verb rendered “become” denotes
a “becoming” (ginomai), in
this case, a change in rank, condition, and status - (Hebrews 2:14-18).
SUPERIOR TO MOSES
Next, the letter compares him to
Moses, again, emphasizing his high status. The Great Lawgiver was more honored
than all the other prophets, and unlike them, God spoke to him face-to-face
- (Numbers 12:7-8, Hebrews 3:1-6).
As our “apostle,” God sent Jesus to
deliver His final “word.” As our
“high priest,” he intercedes for us before His Father. And the
description of him as “one who is faithful,”
and the reference to Moses as one such “also
in all his house” allude to the passage in the book of Numbers - “My servant Moses is not so; he is faithful
in all my house.”
Since the “Son” is superior to the
angels, and since disobedience to his “word” incurs even greater punishment
than disobedience to any word mediated by angels, logically, he is of superior rank
than even Moses.
The keywords in the passage, “faithful,”
“priest,” and “house,” all allude to the prophecy when God promised
to “raise me up a faithful priest;
according to that which is in my heart and in my soul will he do. Therefore,
will I build for him an assured house.” Jesus is that promised “faithful
priest” - (1 Samuel 2:35).
But there is a difference. Jesus is worthy of far more honor than Moses,
just as the one who “prepares” the house is worthy of more honor than
the house. The “Son” is linked with the “builder,” God. He has
been set over the “house,” but Moses was a “servant” in it.
Moses was an “attendant” in the
house “for a testimony.” As the faithful “attendant,” he was the witness
to the word that would come. Thus, the Law given by angels was preparatory for
the superior “word spoken in the son.”
LEARNING OBEDIENCE
In the “days of his flesh,” Jesus offered
up supplications to the one who was able to save him from death. Most likely, this refers to his prayers in
Gethsemane.
Though God hearkened to him because of his
devoutness, and “even though he was a son, he learned obedience from what things he suffered.” In this way, he
was “made perfect” or “complete”
- (Matthew 26:36-46).
Once again, Hebrews presents the “Son”
as one who was “made perfect” by his sufferings. Because of this, he also “became to all those who obey him the author
of everlasting salvation.” And once more, his present exalted status is
based on his past obedience.
HIGH PRIEST FOREVER
Disciples have “a mighty consolation…an anchor of the soul, both secure and firm,”
because their “forerunner” entered the interior of the “sanctuary”
through the “veil.” Thus, he “became
a high priest forever according to the rank of Melchizedek,” a rank he did
not previously hold - (Hebrews 6:18-20, Psalm 110:4).
As our “high priest,” he “became the surety of a covenant” that is
better than anything provided under the Levitical priesthood and its sacrifices.
His appointment as “high priest” occurred when he “sat down on
the right hand of the throne of the Majesty in the heavens” after his
resurrection.
As the High Priest after the “rank of
Melchizedek,” he attained “a more distinguished public ministry” than
any of the Levitical priests, and he became the “mediator of the better
covenant” that is based on “better promises.”
These statements convey the idea of his “becoming”
something “better” than what was provided under the old system – (Hebrews
8:1-6).
TABERNACLE, COVENANT, SACRIFICE
Jesus “approached as high–priest…through
the greater and more perfect tabernacle,” one
not made-by-hand. 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 on behalf of his “brethren” - (Hebrews 8:1-13).
The “new covenant” is superior to
the old. Through the “blood of the Christ, who offered himself unspotted to
God through an everlasting spirit,” the “new covenant” purifies our
conscience from dead works so we can render divine service to God.
And the “blood of Christ” means that
he was able to enter the greater Tabernacle “once-for-all” because of
his obedient death.
In contrast to the “first covenant”
with its repeated animal sacrifices, it was necessary that the heavenly
counterpart of the Tabernacle be established “with better sacrifices than
these,” namely, the death of the “Son.” The result was his entry “into
heaven itself” where he is “manifested before the face of God for us.”
Because of his superior sacrifice, Jesus
has no need to “offer himself often,” unlike the Levitical priests with their
oft-repeated 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.”
Believers 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 evermore,” after which, he “sat down on the right
hand of God.”
By his “one offering,” he achieved
the “purification of sin” and “perfected for evermore those who are
being made holy.” Thus, he became our “faithful high priest” who
lives evermore to intercede for us.
The letter to the Hebrews presents a
consistent picture of a “son” who was exalted to the right hand of God
because of his faithful obedience unto death. Through his exaltation, he BECAME
our “high priest.”
His “perfection” has been
accomplished through his obedience, suffering, and death. And God vindicated his sacrifice by raising him
from the dead and seating him at His “right hand.”
And so, the letter bases the present exalted
status of the Son on the historical
events of the obedience, death, and resurrection of Jesus of Nazareth.
Comments
Post a Comment