When Jesus Became Our Great High Priest
What’s Hebrews 5 about?
This chapter reveals how Jesus uniquely qualifies as our eternal high priest – not through ancestry or human appointment, but through divine calling and perfect obedience through suffering. It’s about God establishing a completely new way for humanity to access Him.
The Full Context
The author of Hebrews was writing to Jewish Christians who were facing intense persecution and considering returning to Judaism. They were struggling to understand how Jesus could be their high priest when He wasn’t from the priestly tribe of Levi. Some were likely questioning whether abandoning the familiar Temple system was worth the suffering they now faced. This passage directly addresses their doubts by explaining Christ’s superior priesthood.
Within the broader structure of Hebrews, chapter 5 serves as a crucial bridge between the doctrinal foundation laid in chapters 1-4 and the deeper theological exploration that follows. The author has established Jesus as superior to angels, Moses, and Joshua – now he tackles the most sensitive issue for his Jewish audience: the priesthood itself. This chapter introduces themes that will be fully developed through chapter 10, particularly the concept of Jesus as a priest “according to the order of Melchizedek” – a priesthood that transcends the limitations of the Levitical system.
What the Ancient Words Tell Us
The Greek word archiereus (high priest) appears throughout this chapter, but it’s packed with meaning that goes far beyond our modern understanding of religious leadership. In the ancient world, the high priest was the ultimate mediator between God and humanity – the one person who could enter the Holy of Holies once a year on the Day of Atonement.
When the author describes Jesus as being “called by God” (kaloumenos), he’s using the same word used for the divine calling of Aaron in the Old Testament. This isn’t about career choice or religious vocation – it’s about divine appointment to a sacred office. The verb tense suggests something that happened at a specific moment in time but continues to have ongoing effects.
Grammar Geeks
The phrase “learned obedience” uses the Greek verb emanthen, which comes from the same root as “disciple” (mathetes). Jesus literally “discipled Himself” through suffering – He became the perfect student of obedience through His human experience.
The most striking phrase in this chapter might be “though he was a son, he learned obedience through what he suffered” (Hebrews 5:8). The word epathen (suffered) is deliberately chosen to echo emanthen (learned) – it’s a play on words that would have been immediately apparent to Greek-speaking readers. Suffering became Jesus’ classroom for obedience.
What Would the Original Audience Have Heard?
For Jewish Christians familiar with Temple worship, this chapter would have been both revolutionary and deeply reassuring. They knew that high priests were chosen from specific families, served for limited terms, and were themselves sinful men who needed to offer sacrifices for their own sins before interceding for others.
When they heard that Jesus “offered up prayers and supplications, with loud cries and tears” (Hebrews 5:7), they would have immediately thought of Gethsemane. But they also would have recognized something unprecedented – here was a priest who truly understood human weakness because He had experienced it Himself, yet without sin.
Did You Know?
The phrase “loud cries and tears” uses vocabulary typically associated with desperate, anguished prayer in extreme circumstances. This isn’t quiet, composed prayer – it’s the prayer of someone facing the ultimate test of faith and obedience.
The mention of Melchizedek would have been particularly intriguing. This mysterious figure appears briefly in Genesis 14:18-20 and Psalm 110:4, but Jewish tradition had developed extensive speculation about him. Some saw him as a prefiguration of the Messiah. The original audience would have understood that the author was claiming Jesus belonged to a priesthood that predated and superseded the Levitical system entirely.
But Wait… Why Did They…?
Here’s something that might puzzle modern readers: why does the author suddenly stop his explanation about Melchizedek and scold his readers for being “dull of hearing” (Hebrews 5:11)? It seems like an abrupt shift from profound theology to pastoral frustration.
The answer reveals something crucial about the original situation. These weren’t new believers struggling with basic concepts – they were mature Christians who should have been teaching others by now. The Greek word nothros (dull) doesn’t mean stupid; it means sluggish or lazy. They had become spiritually apathetic, perhaps due to persecution and discouragement.
Wait, That’s Strange…
The author says they need “milk” instead of “solid food,” but he’s been giving them incredibly sophisticated theology! This suggests their problem wasn’t intellectual capacity but spiritual maturity – they were refusing to engage deeply with difficult truths about their faith.
The imagery of milk versus solid food would have been immediately understood in a culture where weaning was a significant milestone. Just as physical growth requires progressing from liquid to solid nutrition, spiritual maturity requires moving beyond elementary teachings to deeper theological understanding.
Wrestling with the Text
The central tension in this chapter revolves around how Jesus can be both fully divine and genuinely human. The author insists that Jesus “learned obedience through suffering,” which raises profound questions. If Jesus was perfect and sinless, what did He need to learn? How can the eternal Son of God grow in obedience?
The answer lies in understanding the incarnation – the mystery of God becoming human. Jesus didn’t need to learn obedience because He was disobedient; He learned it because He took on human nature. As a human being, He experienced the full weight of temptation, fear, and physical suffering that make obedience costly and difficult.
This isn’t about Jesus becoming better or more righteous – it’s about Him fully experiencing what it means to trust God from within human limitations. When Hebrews 2:10 says He was “made perfect through suffering,” it’s using teleioo, which means “to complete” or “to bring to maturity.” His priesthood was completed through His human experience of suffering.
“Jesus didn’t learn obedience because He was disobedient – He learned it because He became one of us, experiencing the full cost of trusting God from within human flesh.”
How This Changes Everything
Understanding Jesus as our great high priest fundamentally transforms how we approach God. Unlike the Old Testament system where priests were appointed by human succession and served temporary terms, Jesus was appointed directly by God and serves forever. Unlike earthly priests who needed to offer sacrifices for their own sins, Jesus was sinless and offered Himself once for all.
But perhaps most importantly, Jesus understands our struggles in a way no earthly priest ever could. He “learned obedience through suffering” means that when we face difficult circumstances that test our faith, we have a high priest who has walked that same path. When we’re tempted to give up, doubt, or compromise, we can come boldly to the throne of grace knowing that our advocate truly understands.
The priesthood “according to the order of Melchizedek” represents something entirely new in salvation history. It’s not based on tribal ancestry, ritual purity, or human appointment – it’s based on God’s eternal decree and Jesus’ perfect qualification through His incarnation, death, and resurrection.
This means that access to God is no longer limited by geography (you don’t need to go to Jerusalem), ancestry (you don’t need to be Jewish), or mediation through human priests. Through Jesus, every believer has direct access to the Father – not because we’re worthy, but because our high priest has made us worthy through His perfect sacrifice.
Key Takeaway
Jesus qualifies as our eternal high priest not despite His humanity but because of it – He learned through suffering what it costs to trust God completely, making Him the perfect advocate for everyone who struggles to remain faithful in difficult circumstances.
Further Reading
Internal Links:
External Scholarly Resources:
- Jesus the Great High Priest: The Heart of Hebrews by John MacArthur
- The Letter to the Hebrews (The New International Commentary on the New Testament) by F.F. Bruce
- Hebrews (Anchor Yale Bible Commentaries) by Craig Koester
- Christ as High Priest: A Study in the Epistle to the Hebrews by John Brown
Tags
Hebrews 5:7, Hebrews 5:8, Hebrews 5:11, High Priest, Melchizedek, Incarnation, Obedience, Suffering, Priesthood, Sacrifice, Mediation, Access to God, Spiritual Maturity, Jewish Christianity