12 Indeed, the word of God is living and active, sharper than any two-edged
sword, piercing until it divides soul from spirit, joints from marrow; it is
able to judge the thoughts and intentions of the heart. 13And before him no
creature is hidden, but all are naked and laid bare to the eyes of the one to
whom we must render an account.
14Since, then, we have a great high priest who has passed through the heavens, Jesus, the Son of God, let us hold fast to our confession. 15For 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. 16Let us therefore approach the throne of grace with boldness, so that we may receive mercy and find grace to help in time of need.
Step 1: Initial Diagnosis (External Problem) - Daily Auditing
Imagine it: The return address of the letter had a stamp of a skull-and-cross-bones.
It was a letter from the IRS that ordered you to be audited. That would be a word
that divided soul from spirit. Suddenly you would have to sit down because your
joints would be divided from your marrow. Even if you had been as honest as you
could on your tax return, you would still be fretting and sweating because maybe the
IRS would not see things the same way you did. The rules are never perfectly clear.
You would have to appear before the auditor who would question you, judging every
thought and intention of your deductions. You would be laid bare to the eyes of the
one to whom you must render an account. And this is only the IRS.
The writer, to the Hebrews, a witness to Christ, is saying that God's word is going to be even worse. God's word will bare your soul before God. And no matter how hard you tried to be good, to do what was right, you would worry because the law is not always perfectly clear. You would chew your nails because maybe God would not see what you did in the same way you do. This is why, in the Gospel reading for this same Sunday, a man ran up to Jesus, a man who had kept all the commandments of God, a man who was still worried about being audited by God, and asked, 'What must I do to inherit eternal life?'
Step 2: Advanced Diagnosis (Internal Problem) - God's Auditing
The audit done by God's word does not look only at the record of what we have
done—how we cared for our neighbor and how we did not care for our neighbor. The
audit of God's word does not balance the caring acts against the uncaring acts and
say you passed the audit if the caring acts are more than the uncaring acts. Such
an audit would scare us, but most of us would think we would pass such an audit.
However, the audit done by God's word does more than balance what we have done.
God's word judges the thoughts and intentions of our heart! That's what makes the
two-edged sword so sharp. Two things are judged in our heart. The first is that
our intentions are not concerned about the care of our neighbor. Our intention is to
make ourselves look good. We want to accrue more caring acts than uncaring acts so
that we pass the audit. So our intentions are revealed to be self-centered. Second,
God's two-edged sword lays bare that our hearts trust the rules of God (the Law). We
look to those rules for our justification, our goodness, our standing, our means to
pass God's audit. But aren't we supposed to trust God's word? Isn't God's word of
law what we are to follow for how we do God's will and how we please God? No. God's
word of law was never meant as a way that we might pass God's audit. God's word of
law not only tells us when we are not following the rules, but God's word of law
exposes that we trust ourselves and our acts better than God. That's what the auditor
from the office of God's law reports: We do not love God most of all. We have failed
the very first rule of God's law—to have no other god. Whatever we use to look good
before God, including God's law, is our god. We have taken God's law and made it our
god. That is what the man had done in the Gospel reading. And the auditor laid bare
his heart by saying, 'Sell what you own, and give the money to the poor.' That man's
god—what he trusted, even more than the law, to make him look good—was his wealth.
Step 3: Final Diagnosis (Eternal Problem) - The Auditor's Verdict Is Always Death
The very thing we trust—how good we are according to God's law—is the very thing
that God uses to declare we have failed the audit. Trust the law and you get the
law—and the law brings God's judgment and sentence of death. When we hold back money
from the IRS, the IRS takes it. When we hold back our life from God, God takes it
back. God's word that is sharper than any two-edged sword kills more surely than a
sword. If you live by the sword you die by the sword. The law does not say that if we
keep all the law from our youth we shall inherit eternal life. The law says that
those who do not love God most of all must die. And, says the law, all have failed
to love God.
Step 4: Initial Prognosis (Eternal Solution) - Christ's Crossed Bones
For our sake, Jesus, the Son of God, has passed through the heavens. He passed
through death on the cross and rose up to sit on the throne of grace. And Jesus is
able to sympathize with our weaknesses. He has in every respect been tested as we
are, yet without sin, that is, without trusting the law or anything else to give him
life. He trusted God. Even on the cross, abandoned by God, he trusted God. Jesus
knows our weakness, our weakness to trust other things for our goodness before God.
He has been tested as we are, tempted to trust God's law, tempted to trust pleasure,
status, reputation, wealth, education, family, children, or power as things that give
life. But Jesus trusted God's promise that after he was handed over to law-trusters
(sinners) and died, God would raise him to new life. So that all who believe that
Jesus died for their sake and that for his sake we are forgiven, made righteous, and
given eternal life--those same believers have forgiveness, are made righteous, and
are made inheritors of eternal life.
Step 5: Advanced Prognosis (Internal Solution) - Holding Christ and Not a Sword
Christ has taken the thrust of the two-edged sword meant for us. But God raised him.
The law has no hold on those who have passed through death. That's why we "hold fast
to our confession" that Christ is how we pass God's audit. Christ does what we cannot
do by overturning God's judgment against us. Christ gives us his life, his faith that
God is our Father, his perfect audit. We get to hold onto what Christ has given us.
We now approach the throne of grace, God's audit, with boldness. Our boldness is our
trust that Christ is the only receipt we need to prove we inherit eternal life. Christ
is all we need to get forgiveness from God. Christ is all we need to be right with
God. We get to "follow" him instead of the Law. Christ says all who are in him love
God and are loved by God.
Step 6: Final Prognosis (External Solution) - Giving Christ to Others to Hold
We are now in Christ, alive to God forever. But we still face the law's auditing
everyday. Even the innocuous question of, 'How was your day, dear?' is a question
for which we must render an account. If we answered according to the law, we would
tell of all that we did during the day and what we accomplished and how much we got
done and how much more we are behind and still have to do. But since we trust Christ
for how we have done during the day, we can answer that our day has been one of
forgiveness and mercy. There was forgiveness and mercy given to us, and the
forgiveness and mercy we gave to others. When family or friends fret and sweat
because of an audit by their manager, a test at school, a spouse's evaluation about
how you took care of the kids or cleaned the bathroom, we can assure them of Christ's
mercy; this is the definitive word about their worth and goodness to us--much more
important than how we feel they did at a chore. To assure others in this way is to
place Christ into their heart as the one they can trust (instead of sending them
looking to their performance for worth). We help them hold fast to their
confession. Thus they know they can, in time of need, find grace through us
(in Christ) to help them.
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