Saturday, May 11, 2024

Amy Peeler on the Intercessory Work of Christ in Hebrews

  

The author also knows of Jesus’s resurrection (13:20) and places Jesus’s self-presentation to God his Father in heaven (e.g., 9:24). Since he goes to heaven after his resurrection and after his ascension, this heavenly presentation is best interpreted as the completion of his self-sacrifice. (Amy Peeler, Hebrews [Commentaries for Christian Formation; Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans, 2024], 7, emphasis added)

 

This complete salvation is possible because Jesus is always living to petition for them. Because death can never defeat him, it is possible for him to be a priestly advocate forever. Priests offer sacrifices for sins, and Jesus did that once and for all when he offered his resurrected self to God. At the same time, his mediating work before God is not done. Priests also represent people to God and in that way plead their case for forgiveness and continued divine presence. . . . Jesus’s perpetual life serves the purpose of petition for those who are approaching God through him. To petition is fittingly associated with prayer since it describes crying out to God (Rom 11:12; 1 En. 9:3). This particular word (entynchanō) is not used to describe the activity of Jesus, who is not praying to God from a distance but sitting enthroned at God’s right hand. This is the same term Paul uses for Jesus’s and the Spirit’s petition before God the Father (Rom 8:27, 34), giving evidence of a common understanding of divine advocacy in early Christian circles. Moreover, Jesus’s priesthood is a living one, in which his defeat of death allows him to pray for his followers to overcome their own deaths as well. He petitions God to aid their endurance, the very plan God desires and is already playing out *Heb 2:10; 12:5-11). Jesus need not win over the recalcitrant Father with his pleading; rather, he asks for that which is already in line with the divine will, and does so in person with God in heaven. If God the Father and God the Son are for this Christian community, who can stand against them (as the author will say in 13:6, as does Paul in Rom 8:31)? IF the author is gravely worried about the possibility that they may not endure in faith, he is even more confident in God’s ability to ensure that very same endurance.

 

The perpetual life of the Son raises the question about the possibility of his eternal petitioning. Once those who are approaching God arrive at God’s rest, would there be any need for him to continue to plead their case? No longer will sin or death be a problem, but this statement does open the door to the possibility of continued growth in eternity, and a Son who always advocates for it. (Ibid., 202-3)