THE SACRIFICE OF THE PRIEST
Jesus entered Jerusalem on Palm Sunday heralded as the Prophet. By Good Friday, this work of representing God to the people and bringing God’s words to them was almost completed. What Jesus did on this awful day was to fulfil His role as Priest.
The High Priest and his associates were preparing to slaughter thousands of animals in the Temple for the celebration of the Feast of Passover, but first they needed to find a way to kill one man, Jesus.
They arrested Him in the Garden of Gethsemane, convened a court to try Him, which broke the rules for such trials, and condemned Him to death on a charge of blasphemy. Then they presented Him to the Roman governor, Pontius Pilate, on the different charge of treason, asking him to confirm the death sentence they had agreed. When Pilate hesitated, they put pressure on him to ensure the verdict they wanted.
Scourged and tortured, Jesus was forced to carry His cross to Calvary to be crucified, and to die in dreadful pain and humiliation. It was a death He had prophesied to His disciples (Luke 9.22), knowing that, in His role as Priest, He would not only have to offer the sacrifice but be the sacrifice.
The function of the priests was to mediate between man and God, offering the sacrifices thought necessary to receive pardon and cleansing. This needed to be a repeated action but Jesus is greater than other priests, even the high priest. By His one sacrifice of Himself on the cross, Jesus has done away with the sacrifices on the altar (Heb.10.11-12), bringing us forgiveness and restoring us to the family of God. No wonder that the writer to the Hebrews calls Him the ‘great high priest’ (Heb.4.14).
As the religious leaders prepared for the sacrifices in the Temple, the cross became the altar of sacrifice for Jesus, the Lamb of God slain for the sins of the world. Instead of the magnificent robes that the high priest would wear in the Temple for the Passover celebrations, Jesus died in shameful nakedness and humiliation, identified as a criminal although He is the only perfect and sinless person.
Christ’s final cry from the cross, ‘It is finished!’ (John 19.30), declared the completion of His work as Priest. His mediation to God on our behalf was done, offered by His final breath and sealed with His blood. As ordinary priests impart a blessing on their congregation, Jesus’ death provided the blessing of forgiveness and redemption for His people which, in three days’ time, turned their mourning into celebration.








