For it was
indeed fitting that we should have such a high priest, holy, innocent,
unstained, separated from sinners, and exalted above the heavens. He has no
need, like those high priests, to offer sacrifices daily, first for his own
sins and then for those of the people, since he did this once for all when he
offered up himself. For the law appoints men in their weakness as high priests,
but the word of the oath, which came later than the law, appoints a Son who has
been made perfect forever. (Heb. 7:26-28)
In this passage we see the importance given to the fact that Jesus identifies with those for whom he died by undergoing temptation. We are also made aware of the
necessity that this high priest be sinless, or else he would not have been
qualified to enter into the heavenly sanctuary on our behalf. The author
of this epistle clearly assumes that this once-for-all sacrifice is enacted on
behalf of individuals: "...since he did this [offer a sacrifice for the sins of
the people] once for all when he offered up himself" (Heb. 7:27b). What
wondrous love is this?
But while we
may know well-enough about the personal benefits of Jesus' atonement, how often
do we think about its effect on the community at-large? How does this relate to
the call of loving others through good deeds? Why is the task of outward
reconciliation part and parcel of the Christian life? Saint Paul
wrote about this in his letter to the Colossians: Through Jesus, all things
will be reconciled unto himself, "whether on earth or in heaven, making peace
by the blood of his cross" (1:20).
Unfortunately,
some theologians today take the apostle to mean that this outward peace ought
to be the primary element of the atonement, that it is not so
much concerned with the reconciliation of individuals but with the
reconciliation of the entire world through works of mercy. But what makes up
the entire world if not individual and particular living souls?
Attempts such
as these offer an unworthy trade, not to mention a false dichotomy. If a
community of individuals seeks to establish the good works of Jesus on earth
(which includes both preaching redemption and meeting human needs) without
first being a community that realizes the depth of their depravity before a
holy God, then they are destined to promote an empty moralism, worth nothing,
saving no one. We evangelicals cannot afford to let those who deny Paul's
message of reconciliation to individual sinners champion the cause of doing
good through works of mercy in this world. We own it, properly speaking. The
once-for-all sacrifice of the great high priest not only affects our individual
lives at one particular instant in history, it affects the whole of our lives,
and through us, the whole world.
Therefore,
being in the world, as a community of atoned-for individuals, means having a
righteous effect upon the world. Such a task could not be fulfilled if we were
to withdraw out of the world, or if we were to succumb to the world, thus
becoming of this world, or "worldly," as the apostle John phrases it (see 1
John). The church's mission is entirely wrapped up in Jesus' work on the cross.
We must see that it is because of the selfless, tortured, and crucified Son of
God that the church is bound to the task of doing his work in every generation.
Jesus intimately knew pain, hunger, mental anguish, death, and something this
side of physical death no one has known -- being forsaken by the Father.
Jesus took that ultimate burden upon himself. Thus the cross, and the
atonement procured for sinners therein, becomes the very reason we seek to
establish righteousness here and now.
If Jesus had
already returned (as certain end-time enthusiasts exclaim), there would be no
need. But our time here is filled with tension, filled with the need
to establish justice and righteousness. It is a tension that describes the
kingdom as here but not yet fully. It is a tension that portrays the visible
people of God as consisting of both wheat and tares. It is because of this
tension that the church still seeks to fulfill her mission.
Stemming from
God's command to love Him totally and to love our neighbors as
ourselves, Christians are called first to the conversion of souls and then to
works of mercy. It was no coincidence that Jesus inaugurated his
redemptive ministry in Galilee with the following words: "The Spirit of the
Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to proclaim good news to the poor.
He has sent me to proclaim liberty to the captives and recovering sight to the
blind, to set at liberty those who are oppressed, to proclaim the year of
the Lord's favor" (Luke 4:18-19). Throughout his ministry, Jesus did just that.
He preached repentance and reconciliation to the downcast, not to the
"righteous" (Luke 5:31-32). He also healed the sick and fed the hungry (Matt.
15:32; Mark 1:41). As followers of Christ, then, we are to do the same.
After reading about the good Samaritan (Luke 10:25-37) or the king who
divides sheep from goats (Matt. 25:34-40), who does not think part of the
church's mission is to meet human needs with mercy and liberality? Through
this, the world will see the love of God and the authenticity of his good news -- that saved sinners love God and their neighbors.
The final
question we are left with is this: Will Jesus return to a world in shambles due
to our neglect? Or, will he return to a church empowered by the life-giving
Spirit, a church that has taken seriously her commission to train disciples in
the kingdom of God? {This
originally appeared in Tabletalk 28.5 (May 2004): 42-43}
|
Respond to this Blog
Though we do not post comments, we would like to hear from you and may take your comments into consideration in a future article.