The word of the day is “offer.” For the Orthodox, today is the mid-point of Great Lent, the Sunday of the Adoration of the Cross. The cross is the center of the faith. In today’s reading of Hebrews 4:14-5:6, we learn that by the Cross, the Lord became our High Priest (OSB 4:14). The apostle writes that God appointed Him to offer “gifts and sacrifices for sin” as a priest (NKJV vs. 5:1). Today, we view the Cross through the lens of the apostle’s teaching of Christ, the High Priest.
For the Orthodox, the Lord’s death on the Cross was no impersonal payment, no supernatural transaction to balance the scales of divine justice. It was a voluntary and personal act of self-sacrifice. Our reading teaches that Christ fully identified with humankind which was captive to the powers of sin and death.
Christ Was Subject to Human Weakness
The apostle says that He was “subject to weakness” as we are. The Greek word for “weakness” refers to, “feebleness” even “sickness” (Strong’s #769, 44). To explain how the Son of God could share our frailty, St. John Chrysostom says that the Lord assumed our “sinful flesh.” He writes about the Lord’s humanness, “In nature, it was the same with us, but in sin not… the same” (Chrysostom: NfPf 12 “Homilies on Hebrews”). In other words, Christ assumed our “fallen nature” and therefore was subject to all the trials and temptations that we face. Thus, the apostle writes that He can sympathize with all who “are ignorant and going astray” (OSB vs. 5:2).
He Treats Us Gently with Compassion
Moreover, this identification not only enables Christ to be compassionate. His sharing of our fallen nature is the essence of His compassion. The Greek word for “compassion” is derived from the thought of “gentleness” and suggests the treatment of others with mildness (Strong’s #3356, 163.) Therefore, The New King James Version translates the phrase as “able to deal gently” (OAB 5:2). We might say that the Lord knows us “from inside out” since he became one of us. He, therefore, understands our human condition and is kind and forgiving to us.
Furthermore, it is this identification with us in our fallen nature that enabled Him to be the ultimate sacrifice for sin. By becoming incarnate, the Son of God assumed our fallenness. By His death on the Cross, He confronted the power of death. The apostle wrote that the Lord shared our “flesh and blood” “that He might destroy Him who had the power of death, that is, the devil” (OSB Hebrews 2:14). By His sacrificial death, the Lord released those who “through the fear of death… were subject to bondage” (OSB Hebrews 2:15).
A Sacrifice of Deliverance
The Cross, therefore, was not an offering to appease an angry God. It was a sacrifice of deliverance. The Lord used that term to speak of His passion when He announced that he would be delivered to the Gentiles who would torture and kill Him. The Greek word means “to hand over” or “to yield up” (Strong’s #3860, 189). Speaking of the fulfillment of the Lord’s teaching, the Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom says, “On the night in which He [Christ] was given up…” (Divine Liturgy, 69). But the Liturgy goes on, “or rather gave himself up for the life of the world” (Divine Liturgy, 69).
The Offeror and the Offered
We can go on to say, that the Lord delivered Himself up to suffering and death so that we might be delivered. In so doing, Christ did what a priest is meant to do: He offered up a sacrifice for sin. But the sacrifice that He offered to God was Himself. Thus we say in the Divine Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom, “He is the One who offers and the One who is offered (Divine Liturgy, 56). This singular act of self-giving became the ultimate offering for all time.
In summary, the proclamation that Jesus Christ is our High Priest gives us deeper insight into the Cross of Christ. The Cross represents the voluntary offering of the incarnate Son of God who shared our fallen human nature. On the Cross, Christ gave up His life to deliver us from the powers of sin and death. In doing so, He was both the offering and the priest who offered it. one took His life from Him, but He gave it up in the role of our High Priest. He did this that we might be freed from captivity to corruption and have eternal life.
For Reflection
In today’s Gospel, we hear the Word of the Lord: “Whoever desires to come after Me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow Me” (NKJV Mark 8:34). What does it mean to take up one’s cross? If the Cross of Christ represents His self-sacrifice for humankind, perhaps, our cross is our self-sacrifice for the good of others. If on the Cross Christ offered Himself for the world, perhaps taking up our cross means offering our lives to others.
With this in mind, we recall that Jesus said, “Greater love has no one than this than to lay down one’s life for his friends” (OSB John 15:12). Thus, self-giving is the essence of love. If this is true, then all who follow the Lord are to be priests. They are called to offer themselves for the blessing of others.
This call to the discipleship of the Cross is the way to life with God. To assure us of His invitation to bear our own Cross and to follow behind Him, the Lord added a promise. He said, “For whoever desires to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for My sake and the gospel’s will save it” (NKJV Mark 8;35). So that we might obtain the fulfillment of this promise, let us answer the Lord’s call and follow the example of our great High Priest.
Thank you Fr Basil,
It is a sobering thought, to realise that to follow Christ we have to suffer like He did, it gives suffering a meaning and a purpose.
You have explained this with great clarity, Christ is the Way, the Life and the Truth. May He be glorified in our sufferings.