
Hebrews 4:15-16 “For we do not have a high priest who is unable to sympathize with our weaknesses, but we have one who has been tempted in every way, just as we are–yet was without sin. Let us then approach the throne of grace with confidence, so that we may receive mercy and find grace to help us in our time of need.”
Many people go to support groups for help. Perhaps not every support group has the answers a person needs, but people go because they expect to find people who understand the problem, the question. The group isn’t populated by professionals with canned answers, or academics who have been studying the issue for years. It consists of people who share the same problem. They understand it from the inside, because they have lived it. It is easy to make them understand.
Because of this, you don’t expect judgment at the support group. No one at AA expresses shock when a new person attends and confesses that they have a drinking problem. It’s what everyone expects. And because they have been there themselves, they sympathize with their weakness.
As our high priest, Jesus isn’t exactly the same as a fellow struggler at a support group, but some of the same principles apply to his sympathy with our temptations. He lived our lives. He wasn’t born into wealth or privilege. He wasn’t given a human body with an iron skin, or a numbed heart. When people made fun of him, and people did make fun of him, it hurt. When he got cold, or hungry, his body wanted relief. He was a male human being, and he could find a pretty woman attractive. A glass of wine warmed him on the inside. You know when you bump the top of your head on something sharp, like the corner of a cabinet door you forgot was open above you, and you get that burst of maddening pain? That’s what it felt like for him, too.
All these things presented temptations to him, just as they do for us. He has been there. He gets it. And though he never let it take him all the way to sin, he doesn’t judge us for our weaknesses. “I resisted the sin. Why don’t you?”
No, our high priest sympathizes with our weaknesses, and his heart is open to give us help. His sympathy leads us to come to him with confidence, and to know he is always ready to help.
Years ago I started seeing a doctor because I had asthma. From the beginning, he seemed to think it was all in my head. He gave me the impression that he was annoyed that I had come to see him. When the tests he ordered revealed that I did have asthma, he was genuinely surprised.
After taking the medication for a while, I was having some issues with hoarseness in my voice. So I made an appointment. Again, he seemed slightly annoyed that I came. When I got to the examining room, he shined a flashlight in my mouth, and then he said, “I’m not an ear, nose, throat doctor. I probably can’t help you. What do you want me to do?” It didn’t sound as if he cared, and he suggested he wasn’t able to help. I never went back. I had no confidence in him.
As your high priest, Jesus cares. He sympathizes with your weakness. He gets the job done. He is the Son of God who has gone through the heavens. Why wouldn’t we keep going back to him, confident of his mercy when we need help, and confident of his grace when we have sinned? We don’t need to look any further. Hold firmly to this faith, because your high priest makes it possible to pray with confidence.







