For we do not have a high priest who is unable to sympathize with our weaknesses, but we have one who in every respect has been tested as we are, yet without sin. Hebrews 4:15
Many years ago, when I was a very new minister, I tried to
help someone in the church who had a serious mental health need. And I largely
failed. Of course I was pleased when she told me a bit later that she had found
help elsewhere, but also a bit sore (secretly!) that somebody else had
succeeded where I had failed.
She had talked to another minister, and his advice largely
boiled down to a simple suggestion: focus more on the human Jesus rather
than the divine Jesus, on Jesus the man rather than Jesus the Son of God. I
don’t think this advice solved all her problems immediately – in fact I know
that it didn’t – but it certainly made a difference. She started to view Jesus
through new eyes: perhaps rather as he may have been viewed by the people of
Galilee during his earthly ministry.
She had absorbed so much teaching (not least from me) about
Jesus as the second person of the trinity, as God in the flesh, that somehow it
had created a distance between him and her, putting him, so to speak, out of
reach.
As Christians we take delight in the dual nature of Jesus.
Yes, he is indeed God in the flesh, God “incarnate”. But do we tend to forget
or play down the fact that he is also fully human? This truth is spelt out in the
verse above, Hebrews 4:15 (where “tested” could also be translated “tempted”). The
old hymn echoes that verse: “Jesus knows our every weakness;/ Take it to the
Lord in prayer”.
It's impossible to explain how one person can be both fully
divine and fully human; but that is what the Bible tells us, and so we must try
to hold the mystery in our minds. What we mustn’t do is turn Jesus into some
kind of spiritual superman, God merely masquerading as a human being. But I
suspect that, even if only subconsciously, that is what we tend to do. (I once
heard it said that because Jesus was the Son of God “he would have known all
150 psalms off by heart”. But would he? Why? How? What evidence is there for
that?)
The humanity of Jesus is a strand running through all four
Gospels. Here are a handful of places where it is most clear…
In Luke 2:52 we read that “Jesus
grew in wisdom and stature and in favour with God and man”. In other words, he
was a normal child, needing to learn to read and write, plus also the niceties
of social behaviour. Can you picture him as a boy at his desk in the synagogue
school? playing in the street with his friends? growing up into adolescence and
puberty?
In Matthew 4:1-11 we
read that he was “tempted by the devil” (and what a fearsome temptation it
was!). And let’s not say, “Oh yes, but being the Son of God he couldn’t have
fallen!”, for a temptation you can’t fall to is, surely, no real temptation at
all, but simply play-acting.
In John 2:16 we read about his
anger at those he felt were desecrating the temple. True, it was a controlled
anger (“zeal”), but in both actions and words he was pretty fierce.
In Matthew 23:13-36 he
uses extreme language against those who were misleading the people: “fools”, “hypocrites”,
“snakes”, “vipers”.
In John 4:6 we read that he was
“tired” from walking from Judea through Samaria towards Galilee, and so sat resting
by a well. John didn’t need to tell us about his tiredness, did he? But he had
no qualms about doing so. He knew the human Jesus!
In Matthew 24:36 Jesus
explicitly declares his own ignorance regarding the time of his return: “… about
that day or hour no-one knows, not even the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but
only the Father”. So no talk, please, about “Jesus, being God, knows all
things”.
In Luke 19:41 he surveyed the beautiful
but doomed city of Jerusalem and “wept over it”.
In John 11:33-35 he
was “deeply moved in spirit and troubled” and “wept” at the tomb of Lazarus.
In Mark 14:34 he comes to Gethsemane
to pray before his death and displays his need of the companionship and support
of his disciples: “Stay here and keep watch with me” – and of his
disappointment when they let him down: “Couldn’t you keep watch for one hour?”
(verse 36). It’s wonderful to think of Jesus saying to these hopelessly
fallible men, in effect, “I need you! Stay with me!”
And all this, of course, is before we get to Good Friday -
the agony of crucifixion and the “cry of dereliction”: “My God, my God, why
have you forsaken me?”
I wonder if just gathering these texts together will be
helpful to some of us. I do hope so. Whatever, let them be a reminder to us
that in all sorts of senses, Jesus is on our side!
Lord Jesus, please help me to read your word
with openness and understanding, and so to see you as you fully are: both
mighty and glorious, and also meek and humble. Amen.
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