Our Sympathising High Priest: JESUS Christ the LORD
"For
we have not an high priest which cannot be touched with the feeling of
our infirmities; but was in all points tempted like as we are, yet
without sin." -Hebrews 4:15 [KJV]
Our gracious Lord experienced
temptation in every shape and form, for the word of truth declares that in all points He was tempted like as we are, yet without sin. I wish
to speak very cautiously upon this subject, for upon a point so
difficult and so mysterious there is great risk of speaking amiss. So
long as we keep strictly within the language of the Scripture we are
safe, but the moment that we draw inferences from the word without
special guidance by the Spirit of truth, we may greatly err.
You
may think then, sometimes, that your temptations are such as our
gracious Lord never could have been tempted by; but that word of the apostle decides the question, "in all points tempted like as we are, yet
without sin." It is a solemn mystery which I cannot explain, how
temptation in every point, shape, and form could assail the holy soul of
the immaculate Redeemer. I fully believe it. I see the grace and wisdom
of it, and my faith acquiesces in it as most blessed truth. But I
cannot understand it. I know also and believe from the testimony of the
word and that of my own conscience, that whatever temptations He was
assailed with, not one of them could or did sully, stain, or spot His
holy humanity. That was absolutely and perfectly a pure, unfallen,
immortal nature, able to die by a voluntary act, but having in itself no
seeds of sickness, mortality, or death.
And yet I read that,
though thus possessed of a holy, pure, and spotless humanity, in
everlasting union with His own eternal Deity, in all points He was
tempted like as we are. I cannot explain the mystery—I do not wish to do
so. I receive it as a mystery, in the same way as I receive that great
mystery of godliness, "God manifested in the flesh." But still I bless
God that He was tempted in all points like as we are; for it makes Him
such a sympathising High Priest with His poor, exercised, tried, tempted
family here below.
I have sometimes compared the temptations
which beat upon the soul of the Lord to the waves of the sea that dash
themselves against a pure, white marble rock. The rock may feel the
shock of the wave; but it is neither moved by it nor sullied. It still
stands unmoved, immovable in all its original firmness; it still shines
in all the brightness of the pure, glittering marble when the waves
recede and the sun breaks forth on its face. So none of the temptations
with which the Lord was assailed moved the Rock of ages, or sullied the
purity, holiness, and perfection of the spotless Lamb of God.
-preacher J.C. Philpot (1802–1869 A.D.)
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