Monday, April 13, 2026

Heb. 4:14-5:11, The Fullness of Suffering (2)

Jesus paid the full price for a vicarious atonement, being fully counted as a sinner.  But in addition, here are two passages from Hebrews that tell us why He experienced the fullness of suffering.

·       Heb. 4:14-16: We love this passage because the Father invites us, no, entreats us to come into His presence in our time of need.  But what makes it so wonderful is that when we get arrive in His presence we find our “High Priest to the uttermost.”  Jesus was tested (that is the sense of the word “tempted”) in every way as we are.  Look in the following verses, 5:1-2, how the High Priest was chosen from among those He represented before God.  Since He has this connection eHHe can have compassion on those who are ignorant and going astray, since he himself is also subject to weakness.  His compassion comes from His identification with their weakness, not from the fact that He has gone astray.  Jesus never sinned.  But He was tempted to sin, meaning that He was tempted to the max because He did not yield to the sin.  But He could feel every bit of the temptation.  Thus, on the cross, He opted for the fullness of temptation.  He was there for the entire world.  No one can say “He doesn’t understand what I’m going through” because He has not forgone any of the test. 

·       Heb. 5:5-11: Furthermore, He is our “Savior to the uttermost.”  One of the many things that was “finished” on the cross was the “perfecting” of our Savior.  Let us remember the definition of perfecting.

The fundamental idea in this word is the bringing of a person or thing to the goal fixed by God. The word speaks here of Messiah having reached the end which was contemplated in His divinely appointed discipline for the priesthood. This consummation was reached in His substitutionary death on the Cross. (Kenneth Wuest)

“Perfecting” is not talking about sinlessness, though Jesus was sinless.  Rather it is about finishing the race, coming to the end successfully.  Heb. 12:1-2 fits here perfectly.  We are called to “run with endurance the race that is set before us.”  In other words, we need to come to completion.  And what is our goal?  Christlikeness!  We were predestined for this (Rom. 8:29-30).  When God chose us to be “holy and blameless” His plan was that this would come about through our adoption as sons (Eph. 1:3-6).  Heb. 12:2 tells us about Jesus’ perfecting: He endured the cross.  Therefore, in Heb. 5:8, we learn that He learned obedience by the things that He suffered.  As Wuest pointed out, this was finished on the cross.  Having been perfected, He became the author of eternal salvation to all who obey Him.  Do you wonder if “all” includes you?  Yes, it does, if you have exercised the obedience to the faith (Rom. 1:5).  You know because Jesus did not shun the suffering on the cross.

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