Showing posts with label Priesthood of All Believers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Priesthood of All Believers. Show all posts

Sunday, April 2, 2017

Priesthood of All Believers- Because Christ is the High Priest

DAY 34- 4/3/17- DAY 34- THE PRIESTHOOD OF ALL BELIEVERS

“Now there have been many of those priests, since death prevented them from continuing in office.  But because Jesus lives forever, he has a permanent priesthood.  Therefore he is able to save completely those who come to God through him, because he always lives to intercede for them.” (Hebrews 7:23-25)
For there is one God, and one mediator between God and man, the man Christ Jesus.  (1 Timothy 2:5)

The idea of the priesthood of all believers rests on the idea that Jesus is our permanent high priest.  A priest was called to mediate between God and humans: representing God to us and representing us to God.  The priest made sacrifices for forgiveness.  We do not need to make those sacrifices any more.  As Hebrews says (7:27) “He sacrificed once for all when he offered himself.”  As pointed out earlier, we do not sacrifice Christ each time we celebrate the Lord’s Supper.  Christ also intercedes for us- praying for us- and opening up access to God the Father.  So when we pray, we pray in Jesus’ name and for His sake (not ours alone).  Our prayers go through Jesus- not through a priest and then through Jesus.  It appeared that the medieval church seemed to teach that we should be afraid to pray the wrong thing and in the wrong way.  So prayers were written out for each Sunday and for every occasion.  While these can be an aid, it can be a bit like walking with a cane when we could walk without one- we become dependent and lose our ability (to speak freely from our heart). 

Prayer: Lord, thank ou that you are the mediator between God and man.  Help me to trust in the way you have made. 


Saturday, April 1, 2017

The Priesthood of All Believers- All Believers May Serve God

DAY 33- 4/2/17- DAY 33- THE PRIESTHOOD OF ALL BELIEVERS

But you are a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, God’s special possession, that you may declare the praises of him who called you out of darkness into his wonderful light.  (1 Peter 2:9)

Thoughts: The priest had a large amount of power in the Roman Catholic church of the late medieval period.  People were discouraged from reading the Bible. Only the priest was supposed to read (in Latin) and interpret it to the people (though not all priests knew Latin).  Priests had the power to withhold the Lord’s Supper (the Eucharist) and taught that if you did not receive the Eucharist you could not be forgiven.  Priests could tell you what to do in terms of penance in order to achieve forgiveness and could absolve sins in the confessional.  The priest was the mediator between the people and God 
taking away the authority of Christ as the true mediator between the Father and the people.  The pastor was not a lord and his congregation the fiefdom.  Calvin also taught against the idea of a person getting money from the people and not even ministering to them. The Reformation was in many ways a rebellion against power grabs by the church.
 
      The leaders of the Reformation fought against the power of the priest when it went against what scripture said.  They wanted the Bible in the language of the people- both Luther and Calvin were responsible for translations into German, French, and English.  The risk was that people could misinterpret it- but they contended the church too was misinterpreting it.  While communion was still closely guarded for the Protestants, it was not used as a personal weapon as it too often was in the late middle ages.  For Protestants, Jesus Christ is our great high priest, and he is the mediator between God and man (see below).  
     Luther, quoting I Peter 2:9 says (In the Babylonian Captivity of the Church) “In this way we are all priests.  There are indeed priests whom we call ministers.  They are chosen among us and do everything in our name.”  Luther, was not opposed to using the term “priest” and “minister” interchangeably.  Calvin renamed the altar that the Lord’s Supper was served on “the communion table” as a reminder that the minister does not sacrifice Christ again.  We all are called to pray directly to God- we do not have to go through the priest.  We need not over-worry about the content of our prayers- the Holy Spirit helps us to pray and helps us to interpret the scriptures.  We are the priesthood of believers- in that we are called to bring God to others- to the whole world.  As Israel was a witness to God, so all Christians together are an inviting and challenging witness to the Lord.  In our baptism we are all commissioned to go and make disciples and to teach (Mt. 28:19-20). 

Prayer: Lord, thank you that you care about me and desire I know you, read your Word, pray to you, and follow you without hesitation or mediation.  

Tetzel selling Indulgences to Forgive Sins