
Hebrews 4:14-15 “Therefore, since we have a great high priest who has gone through the heavens, Jesus the Son of God, let us hold firmly to the faith we profess.”
Perhaps the idea of having a great high priest doesn’t fill you with an immediate sense of good fortune, like “You just won the sweepstakes,” or “You just received a promotion.” What does this mean? I have someone in a black shirt and white collar I can confess my sins to? A couple thousand years stand between us and the picture the writer of this letter is using.
For almost a millennium and a half, from Moses to Jesus, the high priest was the Bible believer’s access to God. He sacrificed the sheep and the goats that made sure God was still on our good side, that the lines were still open to receive his blessing, that our latest sins and messes (because we are always committing sins and creating messes) weren’t gumming up the works. He brought the prayers before God’s throne so that you could be sure your messages were getting through. They weren’t being returned or rejected when they arrived. If you wanted the Lord to hear you or help you, this was sort of important. The only alternative was to try to get through life now, and judgment day to come, entirely on your own. You might have some success with the first task. You were doomed to fail with the second.
But there were some issues with the high priests themselves. They were unsteady humans full of sin and self-interest just like you and me. Before they could even do their work God required them to offer sacrifices for their own sins, or he wasn’t interested in anything else they brought as offerings or had to say. At times the high priesthood became so corrupt that the Lord couldn’t even deal with them anymore. He arranged for the execution of more than one of the priests for abusing the office across the centuries. By Jesus’ time the whole thing had become a political game. That’s not the kind of institution you want to depend on when your eternal fate is hanging in the balance.
If these Jewish Christians who received the letter to the Hebrews went back to their old faith in Judaism, and the religious life of the synagogue, that’s all there was for them: a corrupt and spiritually empty institution rejected by God. They might feel less alone in the world. They would be part of a bigger family of faith. But it would all be based on something that didn’t work anymore. Spiritually, they would be doomed.
If they stayed in Christianity, “we have a great high priest who has gone through the heavens, Jesus the Son of God…” Jesus had none of the shortcomings of the merely human high priests who had come before him. Concerned about how his work might be received by God in heaven? Concerned whether corruption or incompetence might get in the way? Jesus is the Son of God “who has gone through the heavens.” He doesn’t share our human failings, or those of the other high priests. He isn’t a mere man calling on God from an earthly temple far, far away. He is a resident of heaven. He is the Son of the God whose grace and help we seek. He is acceptable, he has access, like no priest before him. Above all, he offered God the one sacrifice truly capable of erasing our sins: the sacrifice of himself. That meant every advantage for holding firmly to this faith.
Perhaps this all sounds abstract to people like us who never brought an animal to a priest to have it sacrificed, or thought about needing some kind of holy man to get our prayers heard in heaven. But understand that we need this kind of help no less today. It’s not as though God has changed. He finds sin no less offensive than he used to. It has to be dealt with in some way.
You can sample the other religions of the world, and this is what you will find: a great moral teacher, like Mohammed or the Buddha. They will tell you how to live. Maybe they will even help you to be better than you are right now. But lists of dos and don’ts won’t remove your taste for sin altogether, and they provide no solution for the evil we have done. We are still stuck with that. Even some Christian groups offer loads of advice on how to live. For a while it may feel as though we are making progress. But the long-term effect is to pile the guilt of our shortcomings higher and higher. Many, many souls end up crushed under the weight.
Another alternative is to find some religion that still has human priests to make a sacrifice on your behalf. Then we still have all the issues of their human failings. They serve in corrupted institutions of faith and worship. They bring sacrifices God did not request. They offer no help for maintaining our relationship with him. God once said to the Jews, “The multitude of your sacrifices–what are they to me?…I have enough of burnt offerings, of rams and the fat of fattened animals; I have no pleasure in the blood of bulls and lambs and goats…Stop bringing meaningless offerings!” (Isa. 1:11, 13). What good will the sacrifices be anywhere else?
In contrast to all this, we have every reason to hold firmly to this faith we have right now, faith in Jesus as God’s Son, the High Priest who has gone through the heavens. That’s the kind of priest whose service and sacrifice we can trust.







