The Human Sympathies of Christianity
Hebrews 5:1-3
For every high priest taken from among men is ordained for men in things pertaining to God…


Every religion professes to reveal to us the supernatural; every philosophy professes to teach u, moral duty; but Christianity alone has, together with these, approached man with tender and helpful sympathy. Even Judaism did not. Assuredly infidelity does not; it may be very philosophical, it may inculcate a very pretentious morality, but it has no tenderness and sympathy; it has nothing like the Christian ideas of human brotherhood, and Divine Fatherhood. And yet, is not this precisely what we need? Not stern injunctions to be good, but sympathy and help in trying to be good. What is it, think you, that makes your destitute neighbour, who lives in a garret, and dines upon a crust, and shivers in the cold, and writhes in his pain, talk calmly of his condition, uttering no word of complaint, looking rather at the alleviations of his sorrow, than at his sorrow itself; speaking of mercies even where you can hardly discover them. Is it religious cant, think you? If it be, this cant is a very wonderful thing. It can do what nothing else save Christianity can do: it can make a suffering and poverty-stricken man patient through long weary years. What is it, again, that enables the tradesman when misfortune comes upon him, or the husband, when the mother of his children is smitten down, and his house is darkened, to kneel down before God with a breaking heart, and to rise up calm and comforted; what is it, but this very Christianity teaching him, not only that his sins are forgiven, but that God, even while he lives on earth, is his Heavenly Father; watching over his life, and appointing every experience of it, solely intent upon doing him the greatest possible good? Let us look a little, then, at these human sympathies of Christ and Christianity. You will see from the chapter that the apostle is speaking of the necessary qualifications of a high priest; and he says that one of these is, that he should be full of human sympathies — "Who can have compassion on the ignorant, and on them that are out of the way." And these requisites, he goes on to say, are very eminently found in Christ. Here, then, we encounter "the great mystery of godliness," the great fundamental fact of Christianity, upon which all its cardinal doctrines rest, that "God was manifest in the flesh"; that He was essentially Divine, became also properly human — the "Emmanuel, God with us." I call this the most wonderful, the most practical, and the most powerful thought that the world has ever conceived. Why did He become Incarnate? The general answer is — that by "compassing Himself with infirmity He might have compassion on the ignorant, and on them that. are out of the way." Let me show you this in three things. We are ignorant of God's righteousness, and out of the way through our guilt. We are ignorant of God's holiness, and out of the way through our sinfulness. We are ignorant of God's happiness, and out of the way through our misery. And to have compassion on us in each of these respects, Christ became incarnate — compassed Himself with infirmities; for our pardon, for our purity, and for our peace. And these are our three great human necessities.

1. First, the apostle tells that He became incarnate to procure our pardon. "He was made a little lower than the angels for the suffering of death" — that He might be capable, that is, of suffering death. A wonderful thought that — the express purpose for which the Divine Son took our nature was that He might die for us! "Herein is love." "In this the love of God is manifested." Other persons come into the world to live; Jesus Christ came into the world to die. In the very midst of His transfiguration glory "He spake of the decease which He was to accomplish at Jerusalem." In the very midst of His resurrection triumph, He told His disciples that "thus it was written, and thus it behoved Him to suffer." And so perfectly were they filled with the idea of His death, that they described themselves as preachers, not of Christ's teaching, although He "spake as never man spake" not of Christ's life, although He was "holy, harmless, undefiled, separate from sinners" — but of Christ's death: "We preach Christ crucified." And why this strange and exclusive theme of preaching? Plato's disciples preach his doctrine — Moses' followers preached his laws. Why do Christian preachers preach only Christ's death? — glory in a cross? Why, just because we are "ignorant and cut of the way," and this Cross precisely meets our first great need as transgressors; it is Christ's first great proof of redeeming compassion, the first great reason for which He compassed Himself with human infirmity that He might have compassion upon our guilt. It was not merely that He humbled Himself, but that He humbled Himself m this manner, did for us by taking our nature what He could not have done in any other way, and laid down His life for us.

2. And then Christ, as our merciful High Priest, has compassion upon us in our impurity, and takes upon Him our nature that He may set us an example of holiness. Here is a second great reason for His being "compassed with infirmities" — a man like ourselves. He shows us how pure and perfect, and obedient, and patient human life may be. "He learned obedience by the things that He suffered." "He was in all points tempted like as we are, yet without sin." He did not permit either temptation or suffering to sway Him in His obedience: He would fast in the wilderness rather than sin, He would endure the bitter anguish of Gethsemane rather than oppose His Father's will. And having such experience of duty and temptation and suffering, He learned how arduous human virtue is — how much grace and strength it requires. Do you not see, then, how great and precious a purpose of His incarnation this is, to set us a perfect human example? He does not enjoin holiness merely, or describe it in a book — He embodies it in His life; He comes into our sinful world and homes, not as a holy God, but a holy Man; so that if we would be holy, we have only to "consider Him," to "walk even as He walked," to "follow His steps." We learn duty from His obedience; love from His tenderness. We clasp His hand, we walk by His side, we witness His life, the beautiful and perfect exhibition in Him of the moral possibilities of a sanctified manhood.

3. He can have compassion upon us in our sorrows. And for this again He was "compassed with infirmities." It is not without deep significance that He is called "the Man of sorrows," and said to be "acquainted with grief," as if grief were His familiar acquaintance. Emphatically is He "the Man Christ Jesus," "bone of our bone, and flesh of our flesh"; "both He that sanctifieth and they that are satisfied are all of one, for which cause He is not ashamed to call them brethren." In all His earthly experience of duty, and temptation and sorrow He is never less, He is never more than a proper Man, "A Brother born for the day of adversity." Oh! how wonderful this is, and yet how precious, that He "the Creator of the ends of the earth, who fainteth not neither is weary," should incarnate Himself in the weakness of a little child and in the woes of a sorrowful man! And yet this is precisely what we needed; it is an assurance that comes home to our deepest hearts. Do you not often feel the unspeakable worth of a friend who understands your trials and difficulties and sorrows, who can lovingly enter into all your experiences, and give you counsel and sympathy? Then must it not be infinitely more precious to go to One, who, while on the human side of His nature He can thus be "touched with the feeling of our infirmities, because in all points tempted as we are," is also on the Divine side Almighty to help, and loving to pity?

(H. Allon, D. D.)



Parallel Verses
KJV: For every high priest taken from among men is ordained for men in things pertaining to God, that he may offer both gifts and sacrifices for sins:

WEB: For every high priest, being taken from among men, is appointed for men in things pertaining to God, that he may offer both gifts and sacrifices for sins.




The High Priesthood of Christ
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