A sermon given at Bloomsbury Central Baptist Church
11 June 2018
Hebrews
2.14-18; 4.14-15
Hebrews 6.19-20; 13.20-21
You can listen to the audio of this sermon here
https://soundcloud.com/bloomsbury-1/the-pastoral-jesus
In the first of our new sermon series from Hebrews, a couple
of weeks ago,
we began to
explore together how the preacher of this ancient sermon
was
trying to help those in his congregation in Rome
deal with
the fact that, from their perspective,
Jesus
seemed impossibly distant from them.
There they were, trying to keep faith in Jesus as their Lord
and Saviour,
in
difficult and potentially dangerous circumstances;
and yet despite all their faith, all their prayers, and all
their careful obedience,
Jesus still
seemed a long way away from the reality of their daily lives.
They kept telling each other the stories of his life,
how he had
dramatically healed people of physical and mental distress,
but all that seemed an increasingly long time ago,
and with
each year that passed it receded further into the past,
seeming
less and less to match their own experience
of
what it meant to follow Jesus.
And their practice of worshipping Jesus as Lord wasn’t
helping, either.
The
conviction that Jesus was divine
meant
that the one who had once seemed so real,
so
immediate, so approachable,
was now equated
with God up in heaven somewhere,
to
be worshipped and adored, certainly,
but not
really present with them in any way that seemed relevant
to
their personal day-by-day existences.
And if all this sounds a bit familiar, I’m not surprised.
Christians
ever since have struggled with the problem of the absent Jesus.
As decades gave way to centuries, and then to millennia,
the
historical Jesus became not just history, but ancient history.
And, as historical-critical biblical scholarship tells us,
even the
Jesus of the Gospels
was
already several steps of oral tradition
away
from the wandering preacher and miracle-worker of Galilee.
And so, for most Christians throughout history,
Jesus has
been experienced as absent:
worshipped
on-high, seated at the right hand of the Father;
and
studied from afar, through the gospel texts
that
record the stories of his life.
But, just as was the case with the recipients of Hebrews,
not all
Christians are satisfied with an absent Jesus.
Many of the great renewal or revival movements down the
centuries
have come
from a desire to discover a more immediate, a more present, Jesus.
From Julian of Norwich’s 14th century Revelations
of Divine Love,
to the
Welsh Revival, to the charismatic movement of more recent times,
the desire
to encounter Jesus in the here-and-now can be very compelling.
Many of the mystical, ecstatic, or miraculous movements in
Christianity
have been
born from this desire.
And it is this desire to know Jesus, to encounter Jesus,
that the
preacher of Hebrews is trying to address
in his
language of the Pastoral Jesus.
We saw a couple of weeks ago how he encouraged his
congregation
to discover
Jesus in and through all things,
as
the one who sustains the whole of creation;
the one who
is as close to them as the air they breathe
and
the ground they walk on.
Well, the aspect of Jesus’ presence that we’re looking at
today shifts the focus,
from the
cosmic to the personal.
The Sustaining Jesus is also seen to be the Pastoral Jesus.
The one who
created all things
is
also the one who cares for each thing that has been made.
The
impersonal pantocrator
is
also the personal friend and confidante.
And here, for a moment, I’d like to invite you, today,
to consider
how you encounter Jesus?
Is he your Lord and Saviour, or your friend and brother?
Is Jesus,
for you, distant or close?
Can you think of a time when Jesus has been closer to you
than he is today?
And what
did that feel like?
What, I wonder, was the context
that
enabled you to sense the immediate presence of Jesus?
For me, I think that over the years it has come down to my
openness, or not,
to
emotional engagement with the disciplines of spirituality,
and particularly
in saying prayers for others.
It may sound counterintuitive,
but the
times I’ve most sensed the presence of Christ
have been
when I’ve been praying for others to know his presence.
And this, I think, points us towards the way in which the
preacher of Hebrews
presents
his congregation with the Pastoral Jesus:
the
one who is with people in their suffering,
sympathising
with them in their weakness.
One of the ways in which they, and we, can know Jesus,
is by our
experience of his steadfast presence
with us in
the difficult times of life.
One of the lessons which I’ve had to learn over the years,
as a pastor,
has been
that most of the time, I can’t fix other people’s problems.
Given the fact that, most of the time, I can’t even fix my
own problems,
you might
be surprised that this has been such a hard lesson to learn, but it has.
Deep down, you see, I’m a problem solver and a fixer,
and my
default when faced with the difficulty and pain of someone’s life,
is
to click into ‘logical problem-solving mode’
and
start offering them solutions.
And what I’ve had to learn, the hard way,
is that
this doesn’t help people as much as I think it’s going to.
Rather, the pastor in me has had to discover the immense
value
of just
patiently sitting with someone through their pain,
journeying
with them the long and hard path.
And the reason this is so valuable, the preacher of Hebrews
tells us,
is because
this is the Christ-like way;
this the
Pastoral Jesus that Hebrews presents us with.
This is not Jesus the fixer,
who clicks
his fingers to make the pain stop,
but Jesus the pastor
who goes
through the highs and lows of life with us,
always alongside
us, faithfully suffering with us.
And this stands in stark contrast to the many presentations
of Jesus around
who would
make him the answer to all of life’s problems.
From the get-rich quick schemes of the prosperity gospel,
to the
false hope of signs and wonders preaching,
there are many churches, and many theologies,
that offer
quick fix spirituality.
And of course these are attractive,
because who
doesn’t want an easy answer to their problems?
But they are not the way of the Pastoral Jesus.
We know this because the preacher of Hebrews
grounds his
presentation of the Pastoral Jesus
in the
Christ of the cross.
It is through suffering and death
that the
path to new life is opened wide.
There is no bypass to the cross that leads straight to
resurrection.
There is no
cheap grace here.
Jesus the great high priest
can only
make the offering of atonement for our sins
because the
sacrifice he offers, is the sacrifice of himself.
As the preacher puts in in 2.18,
‘Because he
himself was tested by what he suffered,
he is able
to help those who are being tested.’
This is the Pastoral Jesus, who enters wholeheartedly
into the
brokenness of our fractured lives and world
to bring
healing and comfort to those in need.
This is the Pastoral Jesus who takes on the mantle of death
so that he
can destroy the one who has the power of death.
The contrast here is with the Greek heroes,
who
repeatedly took on the forces of evil within the world of Greek mythology.
They typically and dramatically cheated certain death
against all the odds,
escaping
its clutches at the last moment, to return victoriously still alive,
having
killed the minotaur, the hydra, the Nemean lion, or whatever;
before going on the next saga
to defeat
some further personification of evil.
Their efforts to rid the world of evil were, at best, only
ever temporarily successful,
as one
monster gave way to another,
and one
hero eventually passed their mantle onto the next.
Whereas, the Pastoral Jesus goes through death,
as of
course must all whom he cares for.
What changes, however, through the death of Jesus,
is that his
death is for the sins of the world.
It is, the preacher says,
the perfect
and once-for-all sacrifice of self-giving love,
bringing forgiveness to all,
and robbing
the forces of evil of their hold
over the
lives of those they seek to intimidate.
You see, once sin has been forgiven, evil’s power is broken.
There is a unique perspective here on life and death,
that the
Pastoral Jesus offers to those for whom he cares.
Within the ancient world, as indeed in our own,
death was
regarded as a great enemy,
to be
avoided for a long as possible.
Because death is terrifying.
It is the moment of ultimate reckoning,
beyond
which the possibility for further justification in life becomes impossible.
Whatever a person’s view about the life hereafter,
the brute
fact of death marks the completion of life
and invites
judgment on the eternal value of that life.
So the Greek heroes of old often sought to cheat death,
journeying
over the Styx to Hades
to steal
loved ones back to life for a second chance.
And we still have this language today,
with the
person who narrowly escapes death, or who is cured of their disease,
often
speaking of having been given a second chance at life,
and they might say how their priorities have changed
and that
they now want to live less selfishly and more meaningfully.
Well, this kind of second chance at life is certainly a rare
gift,
and for
those who receive it, it is one to be treasured and not wasted.
But this is not the gift of the Pastoral Jesus.
He doesn’t rescue us from the jaws of death
to buy us
more time to live a good life.
Rather, he defeats the very power of death itself
to
dominate, control and enslave our lives.
The perspective on death which the Pastoral Jesus offers to
those who are dying,
and that
is, of course, to all of us,
is that death is not to be feared,
because its
hold over our lives is broken,
because we
have already been forgiven.
We don’t need some second chance to put things right,
because
Jesus has already made us right with God.
So as we, like the first century recipients of Hebrews in
Rome,
face daily
pressures to compromise our faith;
as
we are tested and tempted;
as
we face difficulty and sorrow and suffering;
as
we are inexorably brought to a realisation of our own mortality.
And in all of this, we have in Jesus a pastor and a friend
who
journeys with us, sits alongside us,
weeps with
us, suffers with us,
and
ultimately faces death itself with us;
We have in Jesus one who, in all of this,
brings the
gift of hope to our otherwise hopeless lives.
The preacher describes hope as the sure and steadfast anchor
of the soul;
it is hope
which steadies our lives in the chaos of the world;
it is hope
which sustains us through toil, trial, and testing.
And the hope that the Pastoral Jesus offers us
is the hope
of life renewed in the here and now.
The good news of Jesus’ care for us
is not so
much that we get to go somewhere nice when we die,
as a kind
of reward for being faithful when this life was difficult.
Rather, it is that this life is itself redeemed,
that our
lives, feeble and frail though they may be,
acquire an
eternal value in Christ which transcends even the power of death.
And this gift is ours because the death of Jesus breaks the
hold of sin and death.
Our days
are no longer enslaved to guilt,
and our
lives are no longer a quest for justification and redemption.
We are justified, and we are redeemed,
so we can
live differently, free from the fear of our mortality.
This is not to say that death is to be actively sought,
though;
martyrdom
in a Christian context never involves seeking death.
But it does mean that we can be faithful unto death,
and do with
certainty that the Pastoral Jesus has already given us the gift of life
that
transcends the actual lived days and moment of our lives.
And, as a thought to close, it seems to me
that that
this can affect the way Christians approach
the
controversial topic of end of life care – both medically and pastorally.
As those who work in hospices can tell us,
not all
death is defeat, and not all death is bad news.
Sometimes, death is a blessing and a gift to be taken and
treasured,
rather than
an enemy to be avoided at all costs.
Sometimes, the cost of not dying is too high.
And I wonder if those of us who have encountered Jesus
in such a
way as to come to a realisation
that our
own deaths are not the final word on our lives;
can offer a constructive and hopeful perspective
on those
who are living with the imminence of their own death.
I know that there are strongly held views amongst Christians,
on both
sides of the argument,
relating to
the topic of assisted dying,
and I’m not going to argue a particular side this morning.
But, did you know that in the state of Oregon, in the USA,
it has been
legal for terminally ill, mentally competent adults
to have an
assisted death since 1997.
And the stories from there that have struck me as especially
pastorally significant
have been
those of people who went through the process
of requesting the option of assisted
death after their terminal diagnosis,
but who
chose never to use it;
because
knowing that it was an option
was
enough to help them cope with their final weeks.
The analogy here, it seems to me, is that a changed
perspective on death,
can
profoundly affect the way we live our lives.
For those fearing an horrific end to life,
the option
of knowing that they can bring it to an end is a source of great hope.
And according to Hebrews, the gift of the Pastoral Jesus is
itself a gift of hope,
that life
need not be dominated by the fear of death,
because
death is not the end of life.
Those of us who have identified with Christ in his death,
have also
been identified in his resurrection.
Just as Tommaso will go down into the waters of the grave at
his baptism later,
so he will
be raised to life again
having been
symbolically cleansed of all sin.
For Hebrews, it all comes back to the cross of Christ,
that moment
in history where the power of death and sin over humanity was broken,
and where
the possibility for life eternal broke into the here-and-now.
This is the Pastoral Jesus,
who goes to
his death to redeem our deaths,
and who draws alongside us in our lives,
to redeem
each moment of each day.
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