Today I’m writing a sermon about a sermon. I can tell you’re excited already. The Letter to the Hebrews describes itself as
‘a message of encouragement’ (13:22), a phrase used elsewhere in the Bible to
describe a sermon. So this is a sermon
about a sermon. When one of the early
figures of the Christian Church was asked about the authorship of the letter he
said, with timeless simplicity: “God knows”.
Some think it was Paul and other scholars have even suggested a female
author, Priscilla, but there is no agreement.
Most of what is thought about the letter is opinion based on some of the
clues within the letter itself
.
Setting all that to one side I wholly agree with the
letter’s self-description. It is a letter of encouragement. Probably written to Jewish Christians suffering
persecution in Jerusalem the letter has a stringent focus on the things that
matter when people need support. If you
like, it gets down to the key messages of the Gospel. The fact of suffering as a part of human
experience means that the letter is relevant today as much as it was then. We may not face exactly the same challenges
as those early Christians but the experience of oppression and suffering is
never far away. We all need
encouragement.
Several decades ago I spent a year working as a bread
wrapper in a major supermarket on the Isle of Dogs in London. It was a part-time job which fitted in with
my part-time role as a church youth worker.
The bread wrapping was not the most exciting job in the world. At times managers could be vindictive if
workers asserted their rights or refused to comply with unreasonable
requests. To give you some idea of the
severity of this it was said that the store had 110% staff turnover per annum. At the time I was doing some part-time
training for ministry and one of the tutors came down to visit me in situ. As we talked about the degrading ways in
which staff were treated I found myself saying: “sometimes you have to remind
yourself who you are”. Quick as a flash
the tutor asked: “well, who are you?” Perhaps
he expected the answer ‘a graduate’ or ‘someone training for ministry” but
without thinking I instantly replied: ‘a child of the living God’.
At one level it sounds a preposterous – or possibly pious -
reply. I had strong feelings about the
way shop floor staff were treated and equally strong feelings about my faith
and, when push comes to shove, it is the only answer that matters. Our human dignity is derived from God. Christians over the centuries have suffered
for their faith in many and various ways.
I believe that the theology of the Letter to the Hebrews is an
invaluable document for understanding what sustains Christians when they face
conflict and suffering.
A Christian can renounce or disown their faith – but if
faith is held it cannot be taken away.
From Dietrich Bonhoeffer in prison to countless others who have lost
liberty and possessions, faith is the one reality which cannot be removed; even
death cannot divide them from the love of God.
When the writer to the Hebrews reflects on this we find the following
statement:
“For the one who sanctifies and
those who are sanctified all have one Father. For this reason Jesus is not ashamed to call
them brothers and sisters…
We are children of the living God. This is both our hope and our glory; a
dignity which is placed on us at baptism.
We are the brothers and sisters of Jesus of Nazareth, the Son who bears
‘the exact imprint of God’s very being’.
Through Christ and with Christ and in Christ we share in a dignity which
cannot be removed. So when we face
suffering, loss or opposition, we know that this fundamental dignity cannot be
taken away. It was present on the cross
and passed through death: it became resurrection and is offered to all who turn
to Christ.
Chris Swift