Bible Baptist Church

  • About Us
    • Our History
    • Our Beliefs
    • Our Leadership
  • Service Times
  • Jesus
  • Events
  • Media
  • Online Giving

November 1, 2021 by Max Tardie

Jesus, Our High Priest – Article 3

His Ministry

This is third in a series of article about Jesus and His role in our lives as our high priest. This article is going to address how Jesus ministers to us and God.

As we’ve discussed in previous articles, the main function of a priest is a go-between, a mediator. We often look at how Jesus ministers to us, but He also ministers for us. In His role as mediator, He ministers to us and also to His Father.

Priestly ministry to people

All the way back in Genesis 14, we see the very first person called a priest in the Bible: Melchizedek. This priest came to Abraham (called Abram at the time) after he had won a battle to rescue his nephew.

Genesis 14:18-20 “And Melchizedek king of Salem brought forth bread and wine: and he was the priest of the most high God. And he blessed him, and said, Blessed be Abram of the most high God, possessor of heaven and earth: And blessed be the most high God, which hath delivered thine enemies into thy hand. And he gave him tithes of all.”

We see Melchizedek ministered to Abraham in three ways:

  1. He provided for his needs (“…brought forth bread and wine…”).
  2. He blessed him (“And he blessed him…”).
  3. He led him in worship to God (“And blessed be the most high God…”).

This is the main ministry in the scripture of all priests toward the people. They are called to show God’s gracious character to people in need, to bless them as God wished to bless them, and lead them in worshipping God who delivers them.

Jesus’s ministry to us

When Jesus ministers to us, this is His exact ministry.

First, He is compassionate, meeting our needs. He called us to pray for our daily bread. While on earth, He healed the sick and provided for the poor. We’ve already looked at His empathetic role, which aligns very well with this piece of His ministry. This takes His empathetic role a step further, ministering to us based on His ability to understand and feel our needs and weaknesses.

Second, He blesses us:

Ephesians 1:3 “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ:”

His blessings are in the name of His Father. God desires to give us good things. Again, this aligns well with His empathetic role and takes it into action. This is a prayer of protection, of an open way for God’s good things to flow to us. It’s a prayer for our happiness and joy in God and all His good will toward us. This refers to His role of interceder and advocate, which we’ll discuss in a future article.

Third, he leads us to worship God. In fact, we could not come to God without His death on the cross to pay for our sin. It is His life, death, and resurrection which most vividly communicate to us His Father’s grace and love. Because of this, Jesus leads us in worship to the God who delivers us.

Priestly ministry to God

The priest’s role did not just stop at ministering to people. In the law of Moses, God provided clear and specific instructions on how His people were to worship Him. Much of this worship required sacrifices that the people would bring, but some of it was done in the tabernacle where only the priests could go. In the tabernacle, the priests would attend the various articles such as the candlestick, the table of shewbread, and the altar of incense.

Even still, one task was reserved specifically for the high priest. He would minister on the day of atonement by entering the holy of holies once a year and sprinkling the blood of a lamb on the ark of the covenant.

What we see is that God called His people to minister to Him in specific ways, but then prohibited some of them from doing so. Why?

Jesus’s ministry to God

We saw in our first article in this series how the tabernacle and its way of worship were shadows of the true things. The priest and high priests of the Old Testament system were pictures, types of the true priests and high priest to come.

Hebrews 8:1-2 “Now of the things which we have spoken this is the sum: We have such an high priest, who is set on the right hand of the throne of the Majesty in the heavens; A minister of the sanctuary, and of the true tabernacle, which the Lord pitched, and not man.”

Jesus is God’s high priest. We are like both the people and the priests of the Old Testament. There are some things that God allows us to do in serving Him, but some things we can’t do at all. Jesus ministers for us.

Just like the people couldn’t go into the tabernacle and relied on the priests to serve God, so we are unable to complete the righteousness that God has called us to do. We can’t do enough good to fulfill God’s righteous requirements. In our place, Jesus completed God’s work. He satisfies God’s righteous requirements. It’s His ministry toward God, not our works or failures, by which God is satisfied.

The Bible also calls those of us who have trusted in Jesus a “royal priesthood.” We are now able to serve God in ways we couldn’t before He saved us. But even now, we can’t atone for our own sins. Thank God for Jesus, our high priest and intercessor, who has already entered the holy of holies in heaven and paid for our sins! He went where we could not and paid what we could never pay! Even today He intercedes before His Father to continually allow His once-for-all sacrifice to leave the way to God open and clear for all who come to Jesus.

Pictured rightly

Jesus’s ministry is just like His role as mediator: it works toward us and God.

To us, Jesus meets our needs from His compassion, blesses us, and leads us to worship God.

To God, Jesus fulfills the requirements of righteous service and has paid for our sins.

There is no work needed, no more price to pay, to appease God’s will. Jesus did the work. Jesus paid the price. He cares for us, blesses us, and leads us.

Praise God for Jesus, our ministering high priest!

<– Previous – Article 2 – Jesus, Our High Priest – His Empathy

Filed Under: Our High Priest

October 25, 2021 by Max Tardie

Jesus, Our High Priest – Article 2

His Empathy

This is the second of a series of articles about Jesus and His role in our lives as our high priest. This article is going to address Christ’s empathetic role toward us and God and how important that is to our daily lives.

Saying that Christ has a high priestly role of empathy means more than what we might think at first glance. As we look, we’ll see that Christ is able to know, feel, and respond to our deepest needs and desires, and to God the Father’s deepest needs and desires as well.

The role of empathy

First, what do we mean by empathy? The dictionary defines it this way:

“the ability to understand and share the feelings of another.”

This is more than sympathy.

To be sympathetic is to feel for someone. To be empathetic is to feel with someone.

When we speak of Christ’s empathetic role, we speak of His ability to feel with us, and as Mediator, with His Father as well. He is the go-between of our needs, emotions, delights, and pains, bringing them to God the Father. In turn, Jesus is also the go-between of God’s needs, emotions, delights, and pains, bringing them to us.

In the Bible

Christ’s empathetic role is perhaps best seen in Hebrews 4:15-16. We’ll look at both sides to His empathetic role in the rest of the article. Try to spot both sides as you read the verses:

Hebrews 4:15-16 “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. Let us therefore come boldly unto the throne of grace, that we may obtain mercy, and find grace to help in time of need.”

Toward us

Christ’s role toward us is special and intimate and explained in verse 15:

Hebrews 4:15 “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.”

When we think of a high priest, we may have images of someone in white robes, perhaps with a large religious hat, who is clean and pure and apart from the common people. This isn’t a bad picture if we’re trying to think of the high priest in the Old Testament.

But Jesus is much greater. In His role as high priest, He became one of the common people. Hebrews says our high priest isn’t one that is far removed from our pains and weaknesses; He has felt them all. He knows what it is like to be sick, to be tired, to be sick and tired of being sick and tired. And in case we didn’t get it, we’re told He was tempted like we are tempted, yet without sin.

Do we understand that? Jesus knows, not in a hearing or far away knowledge, but in a feeling knowledge, a close knowledge. He has experienced our weaknesses; He feels our pain. Jesus even knows what it’s like to deal with sin and its struggle.

In His role as high priest, Jesus delights in understanding us. He considers it a joy to carry our cares and understand our wounds. This isn’t a job to Him; it is His nature. It pleases Him to serve us in feeling our feelings and knowing our cares.

Toward God

As Mediator, Jesus not only carries our feelings to God His Father, but His Father’s feelings to us as well. We learn what those feelings are in verse 16:

Hebrews 4:16 “Let us therefore come boldly unto the throne of grace, that we may obtain mercy, and find grace to help in time of need.”

See the “therefore” in the verse? What we see is an invitation, knowing that Jesus ministers to us through His ability to know and feel our deepest feelings. This invitation is to come boldly to the Father’s throne. Why?

Jesus is telling us His Father’s deepest feelings and desires toward us is to shower us with grace.

Jesus, in His empathetic role, sees our suffering and weakness and begs us approach His Father’s throne! He has seen His Father’s heart for us, a heart that wants to lavish us with grace and mercy for our needs.

God’s needs?

Does God have needs that Jesus would need to mediate? No, at least He doesn’t have needs like we do. He doesn’t need food or clothing. He doesn’t even need our praise. His “need” is to act in His nature. He must act in His nature. In theology we call this His “immutability,” the fact that He is unchanging, always the same.

Normally when we think of God’s unchanging nature, we think of it in a static, unmoving form, like how a statue doesn’t change. But God’s immutability is greater than that. The great comfort of His unchanging nature is that He acts on it. He does what He is. What we know of God from His testimony of Himself is that His nature is loving and merciful toward those who place their faith in His Son Jesus, and that will never change.

Notice God’s testimony of His own nature when declaring His name to Moses:

Exodus 34:6-7 "And the LORD passed by before him, and proclaimed, The LORD, The LORD God, merciful and gracious, longsuffering, and abundant in goodness and truth, Keeping mercy for thousands, forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin, and that will by no means clear the guilty; visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children, and upon the children’s children, unto the third and to the fourth generation."

What do we see about Jesus’s empathetic role toward His Father? He mediates God’s nature of mercy and grace. He calls us to His throne because He desires to give us the goodness that His nature moves Him to give us.

Pictured rightly

This is Christ’s empathetic role as high priest.

Jesus feels our weaknesses and responds by moving toward us, not away.

Jesus feels His Father’s loving heart toward us and calls us to Him.

Christ is the mediator, the high priest, between us and His Father. In His empathetic role, He feels our needs, and calls us to come to the Father who wishes to fill our needs.

Praise God for Jesus, our empathetic high priest!

Next – Article 3 – Jesus Our High Priest – His Ministry –>

<– Previous – Article 1 – Jesus Our High Priest – His Role

Filed Under: Our High Priest

October 18, 2021 by Max Tardie

Jesus, Our High Priest – Article 1

His Role

This is the first of a series of articles about Jesus and His role in our lives as our high priest. This article is going to address Christ’s role as mediator toward us and God. This will help set the stage as we learn about His role as high priest going forward.

The priests

In the Old Testament when God saved the Jewish people from slavery to the Egyptians, He told Moses how the people should worship Him. This worship involved sacrifices, holidays, washings, rituals, and work in God’s holy tabernacle. God declared that only a certain group of people could perform the most holy functions in the tabernacle area.

God called this special group of people who could work in the tabernacle the priests. The priestly function, above anything else, was to act as a go-between, also called a mediator. They represented the people before God, and they represented God before the people.

There was one priest that was above the rest. God called him the high priest. The high priest had all the normal duties of the regular priests but were also responsible for some unique functions. If the regular priests functioned as mediators, the high priest was the true and greatest mediator.

Why priests?

What do we learn from the fact that God established the priests? After all, when God sent Moses to Pharoah to tell him to let the children of Israel go, it was so they could serve the Lord in the wilderness (Exodus 7:16). When they enter the wilderness, they’re told only one small group of them is allowed to do the normal worship of God. Why?

We learn that we need a mediator. God didn’t arbitrarily give us a go-between because He didn’t want to deal with us anymore. This isn’t God’s way of getting a secretary that tells us His schedule is always booked. We must have someone to help us get to God.

Since the very garden of Eden when the world, the cosmos, was plunged into the effects of sin, we were separated from God’s presence. And the reason for this separation is very clear: sin. God is holy, set apart from sin. If we sinners wish to come to Him, we need a go-between. We need help.

Shadows of the true

A lot of what we’ll discuss about Jesus as our high priest comes from the book of Hebrews. The author of Hebrews explains in detail how Jesus has become our high priest. God has declared that Jesus has fulfilled the requirements of the Old Testament system of laws for worship. He also declared that those laws and systems were a shadow, a type, of the true worship of God.

Hebrews 9:24 “For Christ is not entered into the holy places made with hands, which are the figures of the true; but into heaven itself, now to appear in the presence of God for us:” [bold added]

What we learn is that God wants to learn about how He created the role of the priests to teach us about how Jesus works for us today as our high priest.

A true Mediator

The first thing we see is that Jesus is our mediator.

1 Timothy 2:5“For there is one God, and one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus;” [bold added]
Hebrews 8:6 “But now hath he obtained a more excellent ministry, by how much also he is the mediator of a better covenant, which was established upon better promises.” [bold added]
Hebrews 9:15 “And for this cause he is the mediator of the new testament, that by means of death, for the redemption of the transgressions that were under the first testament, they which are called might receive the promise of eternal inheritance.” [bold added]

Jesus Christ serves us by being our go-between before God. He also represents God to us.

Luke 14:7 “If ye had known me, ye should have known my Father also: and from henceforth ye know him, and have seen him.”

Jesus has made the way clear for us to approach God. In His duty as high priest, we have direct access to God’s holy throne, and we have access to His word.

Article 2 – Jesus, Our High Priest – His Empathy –>

Filed Under: Our High Priest

September 27, 2021 by Max Tardie

The Songs of Green Things

It happened on the third day.

From brown and barren earth, the green things grew upward.

Life.

Out of rugged stone and ragged ground the green things broke through and claimed the lifeless for the Maker. In this, their first song, their truest song, was first sung. For the song of all green things is that the Maker delights in life where there is emptiness, and that He causes His goodness to spread throughout the whole earth.

The green things rejoiced in the song they sang together. The whole earth itself was glad.

Seed and Spore

But then the green things approached their Maker.

“Lord,” they said, “we wish to spread our song, but we cannot. We want to travel the earth and sing, but we must stay where you have placed us. It is written in our song. And look, some of us will last for years to come, but some will whither. It is written in our song. What will we do that we may continue to sing?”

And so, the Maker replied, “Look, I have made the seed and the spore. Through these, I will give you more songs. Your song will spread through the whole earth. You will sing until the earth is passed, and your song will continue even after. For I tell you a mystery: I will make man who will rule over you. He will hear your songs, and they will teach him of me and my wisdom and my glory. But the man will not listen. After him, I will make a second Man, and He will teach your song to all who will come after Him.”

The green things clapped their hands. Then the Maker gave them each their seed and called them forward to teach them their new songs.

Return

The Maker bent low and said, “To some of you, I will teach a new song: Return. You will grow and flourish in your time, and I will make a sun to shine upon you that will give you life. Yet you will not be able to bear the heat of the sun or the power of the seasons for too long. You will return to the earth and sow your seed where you once stood. This is your song: Except you fall and die, you will remain alone; but if you die, you will multiply greatly.

“This is a song for man to hear. Let him learn that only I can bring life from death, and I can multiply blessing through suffering.”

Release

Then some of the green things spoke to the Maker. “Lord, we have no one to sow our seed, and you have not given us feet to move. And look, if we would plant our seed beneath us, there would be no room for them at our own roots. How will we get our seed to go far off?”

The Maker answered, “To some of you, I will teach a new song: Release. You will grow tall and lively, and in your time you will bear your seed. Then I will shake you through my breath upon the earth, and you will release your seed to me. I will blow your seed, some carried by spinning copters, some by fluffy threads, some so small that the eye cannot see them. My wind will blow these seeds and carry them where you cannot go, and plant them where you cannot reach.

“This is a song for man to hear. Let him learn that only by letting go of his own treasures to the moving of my Spirit can my will be accomplished. Let him learn that I can carry my goodness farther than he could dream to reach on his own.”

Give

Then the oak and other green things like him spoke to the Maker. “Lord, you have given us seeds that fall at your shaking. They are not carried by your wind. What will we do?”

The Maker smiled and said, “Look, I will make the squirrel and others like him. I will give him a spirit that works tirelessly and will give him a humongous appetite. I will make him to eat your seeds.”

The oak replied, “Lord, do not do it! How will I last?”

The Maker laughed and answered, “Do not worry. Though he will love to devour your seeds until he is very full, he will soon have no more room in himself. He will bury your seeds in the ground, hoping to eat them later. But what he does not know is that, though I blessed him with many wonderful things, I did not give him a good memory. He will soon forget where he hoarded your seeds. In this, you will pay for your own workers out of your abundance of seeds, and the squirrels will plant your seeds for you.

“This is a song for man to hear. Let him learn to give freely to even those who would devour the goods I gave him, for out of their weakness I will further my plan.”

Fruit

Then other green things came to the Maker and said, “Lord, you have given us the task to grow our seeds within ourselves. Why?”

The Maker answered, “To you I will teach a new song, a very special song: Fruit. You will grow and be helped by many other creatures that I will create. From the bee to the butterfly to many mysterious and surprising workers, I will share your goodness between those of your kind. When the time is right, you will wrap your seeds in something good for food. When your fruit is ready, you too will release it. Others will come and enjoy your fruit and discard your seed. In this, your song will flourish throughout the world, and those that dwell on the earth will rejoice in your song.

“This is a song for man to hear, a very special song. Let him learn that it is by my working in very little and surprising ways that he can bear my fruit. By your song he will know that the fruit of the Spirit is meant for others to enjoy, so that my goodness can be shared. Let him learn that I have called him to sow the fruit of righteousness in peace. In this, I will sow my seed, some on hard soil, some on stony ground, some among weeds, and some on good ground that will also bear fruit. Then the whole earth will rejoice in my goodness that I share through them.”

Listeners

There were many other songs taught that day. The Maker put great care to ensure each had learned its special song. Some were loud, some were soft, and some so mysterious and wonderful it is unknown if even they knew meaning of the songs they sang. Then, the day ended, and the green things rejoiced to see how the Maker would finish His creation.

When man and woman were made, the green things sang together, for those who would listen had come. The Maker, wishing to weave their songs together, took special care of the green things and made them into a garden in Eden. The green things have never sung a more perfect song since that garden.

But it was in the very special song, the song of Fruit, the song that was meant to give the fullest of life to man and woman, that the garden could no longer be heard. For the man and the woman did not listen to the song of Fruit, but took the fruit they should not have taken. They devoured it against the Maker’s warnings, not knowing that the song of fruit tells of the seed within it. For fruit is not for what is on the outside, but what is on the inside. The fruit God intended for man contained life, while the fruit they chose held death.

So, the man and woman whom the Maker had made to enjoy the song of the garden were thrown out of the garden.

The Second Man

Yet the green things still sang throughout the world.

Then, coming to the Maker once more, they cried, “Lord, these men and these women do not hear our songs!”

The Maker answered, “Sing them anyway. I delight in them. He who has ears to hear, let him hear. And remember what I told you before: I will make a second Man, and He will teach your songs to all who come after Him. They will sing an even better song, a fuller song, a finished and unending song.”

“But Lord,” the green things responded, “how will the second Man know our songs?”

The Maker smiled. “He is the one who taught them to you.”

Ever since and even still, the green things sing throughout the world. He who has an ear, let him hear.

by Max Tardie

Filed Under: Stories

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • 2
  • About Us
    • Our History
    • Our Beliefs
    • Our Leadership
  • Service Times
  • Jesus
  • Events
  • Media
  • Online Giving

Facebook

Cover for Bible Baptist Church of Berlin, Vermont
594
Bible Baptist Church of Berlin, Vermont

Bible Baptist Church of Berlin, Vermont

A friendly, Bible-believing, missions-minded church in the heart of Central Vermont.

Bible Baptist Church of Berlin, Vermont was live.

17 hours ago

Bible Baptist Church of Berlin, Vermont
Join us for church! ... See MoreSee Less

Video

View on Facebook
· Share

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Linked In Share by Email

Bible Baptist Church of Berlin, Vermont

3 days ago

Bible Baptist Church of Berlin, Vermont
Good morning church! On Sunday morning I challenged us to spend some time this week in Psalm 119. I just wanted to remind you all of that, and then encourage you to share something that stood out to you from your time in that Psalm.One thing that stood out to me was the Psalmists "Delight" in the Word of God. This word came up many times, in fact in the KJV it is in nine different verses. (16, 24, 35, 47, 70, 77, 92, 143, 174) There are three different Hebrew words that have been translated as delight which describe how the writer felt about God's Word. While there were many things that the writer could have delighted in, the Word of God was a constant source of delight in His life. I believe that this was a choice, and when he chose to delight in the Word of God, the Word of God had a positive affect on His life.Psalm 119:16 "I will delight myself in thy statutes: I will not forget thy word."Let's choose to Delight in the Word of God!Read it, Study it, Believe it, Apply it!Share in the comments! ... See MoreSee Less

Photo

View on Facebook
· Share

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Linked In Share by Email

Bible Baptist Church of Berlin, Vermont was live.

4 days ago

Bible Baptist Church of Berlin, Vermont
Join us for church! ... See MoreSee Less

Video

View on Facebook
· Share

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Linked In Share by Email

Directions

Contact Info

Bible Baptist Church
68 Vine Street
Berlin, VT 05641

Church: (802) 476-6487
Pastor Josh: (802) 522-4678
joshfrostinvt@yahoo.com

Copyright © 2023 · Executive Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in