The Second Chance for God’s People. Timothy W. Seid
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The people around you at church are the people with whom you’ve chosen to be on this journey. Their gifts are there to help you on the way. They depend on your gifts to help them. Together we are committed to working together to achieve the goal, to experience together the entering into God’s rest. The Church’s motto should be, “No Child of God Left Behind.”
It’s All about Who You Know (4:14–16)
It’s all about who you know. We normally say that when we’re being cynical. Someone doesn’t get a job and they tell their friends, “It’s all about who you know.” At a banquet, someone sees a person they know sitting at the head table with the leaders of the organization or with the guest speaker, while they are sitting at a crummy table in the back with their view partially blocked by a pillar. To make himself feel better, he comments to his friends, “It’s all about who you know.”
I’ll bet more than one person in New Orleans has said, “It’s all about who you know,” when they didn’t get help cleaning up and rebuilding in their neighborhood and people somewhere else did. If the tables are turned, and we are the ones who have received the benefit, we might explain our good fortune to others, “I guess it’s all about who you know.”
While I was in graduate school at Brown University, I met a guy named Allen who was working on his dissertation in the philosophy department and working in computer services. He and a few others organized a Computing in the Humanities Users Group, affectionately called CHUG (although I was never a witness to any chugging; maybe they just didn’t invite me). I became interested and spent a great deal of time learning about computers, some programming, and how to format text documents properly. Allen began to get me freelance work, such as doing the typesetting for the phone listings in the campus directory, creating camera-ready copy for a few professors’ books, and working on some unique jobs that involved some programming in order to create documents. Time after time I was given opportunities because I knew Allen. There was even one time at a conference in Chicago that, because of my connections with Allen and the others, I was invited to go to dinner with the people at the conference who were working on the application of technology to biblical studies—even getting to sit next to the person who was the foremost person in the field in those days. Allen is now at the University of Illinois, a leading expert in the field of digital libraries and has been interviewed on Fox television. A few years ago I contacted him and he responded with, “Look at us now. We’ve graduated and gone on to get positions in higher education, doing significant work.” My response to him for my part was, in essence, “it’s all about who you know.”
In the situation of the people to whom the book of Hebrews is addressed, there was little about their circumstances that was what they had come to know. Every week in the synagogue they would hear about the house of God where the priests would intercede for the people through prayers and sacrifices. The High Priest would represent all of the people once a year by entering into the Holy of Holies, into the very presence of God in that inner sanctuary behind the purple curtain. For these people, little was left of the former glory. Even if Hebrews were written in the 50s or 60s, many of the people had come to view the temple as a source of religious and political corruption. After the destruction of Jerusalem in the early 70s, when Hebrews was probably written, the people no longer had a temple or a priesthood. No one to intercede for them. No one to enter the presence of God. No one to offer the sacrifices. The only blood being shed in Jerusalem was the blood of the martyrs.
For some Jews and Gentile god-fearers, all hope was not lost. They believed that a sacrifice had taken place back in the 30s that once-and-for-all achieved God’s forgiveness for the sins of the people. There was no longer a need for a High Priest to make sacrifices in the Jerusalem temple. There was no reason to lament the absence on the throne of a king who is a descendant of David. All hope was not lost, even though the Romans had squashed rebellion and wrested control from the religious and political authorities in Judea.
Some people had been loyal to the Herodians. Some supported the Sanhedrin. Others had been part of various rebellions and followed this or that messiah. A number of people had fled to the wilderness and joined the Jewish monastic community by the Dead Sea. A few had come to know a man from Galilee named Jesus; they were confident that after his stellar leadership of their group, his endurance through suffering and martyrdom, that God had raised him from the dead. They were empowered by God’s spirit because of whom it was they knew.
Life for us often seems out of control. The dominant voices in our society are those that promote materialism, advocate the use of power to get what you need, and getting ahead in life is based on who you know. We feel insignificant in the big scheme of things. Who’s going to help us? How can we get anyone to listen to us? Who knows what I’m going through enough to show me a little sympathy? When am I going to get a break? Hebrews has two words of encouragement at this point: First, we need to do our best to stay committed (4:14–15); second, we need to go to God when we need help (4:16).
Do Our Best to Stay Committed (4:14–15)
The main clause in verse 14 is “let us hold fast to our confession.” Followers of Jesus commit their allegiance to him and with it hold to a particular way of life and ways of thinking about God. The most important part of being a member of the group of Jesus followers is to maintain one’s allegiance, to “hold fast.”
The opening clause is subordinate and gives the basis for why we should be doing our best to stay committed. Verse 15 will give a second reason. First of all, we should stay committed because of what Jesus has accomplished and, secondly, because Jesus acts on our behalf.
In chapters 1–4 Jesus is compared to the angels who have been active with God in creating the world and bringing God’s message to humanity through the words of law and prophecy. People failed to respond to God’s leading and were found to be faithless and disobedient. Consequently, God allowed them to lose their way and even lose their lives. Their experience becomes our example.
Hebrews is leading into the next way of comparing Jesus and demonstrating the way in which what God has done in his Son has surpassed what God has done in the past. The next comparison beginning in chapter five will be the priesthood. Not only can Jesus be described as priestly, but in this heavenly typology Jesus is a High Priest, in fact a “great high priest”—an expression applied to those high priests of previous centuries who not only served as religious functionaries but also held political power. Jesus’ rise to power was exaltation to heaven.
Frequently in Jewish writings, heaven is described as being multi-layered—three or even seven stories of heaven. Jesus passed through the heavens, penetrated to the highest heaven, the dwelling place of God, where God is described as seated on a throne. The one to whom we claim allegiance is the one who has risen to ultimate power in the universe.
In the tragic love story of Tristan and Isolde, we learn the lesson of heeding our allegiance. Without giving away too much of the story for those who might want to see the movie, Tristan grows up to become second to the king, King Marke. Tristan faces the moral dilemma, does he give in to his passions and be with Isolde, his true love, or does he stay committed to his allegiance to the king, someone who has been like a father to him. Tristan becomes distant from the king to King Marke’s utter amazement. Together they had dreamed of the day when the tribes of Britannia would be united against the Irish, when their tribe would be supreme and rule with strength and equity. And when it finally becomes a reality, Tristan is reluctant to be a part and lends no support to his king. In the end, Tristan pays dearly for his divided loyalty.
God must be utterly amazed at our behavior at times. God chose a people, rescued them from oppression, protected and fed them in the wilderness, gave them a means for relationship with God, and in return God gets complaints and faithlessness.