8 Though
he were a Son, yet learned he obedience by the things which he suffered;
9 And
being made perfect, he became the author of eternal salvation unto all them
that obey him; (Hebrews 5:8-9)
That first verse there has puzzled me a
long time. How did Christ learn
obedience by the things He suffered?
I know I have learned obedience, but
hardly ever has it been by suffering, except from suffering the consequences of
disobedience. How did Jesus learn
from suffering when He did not disobey?
I’ve learned obedience by learning from
other people’s mistakes, but that did
not involve my suffering at all.
I’ve learned the sweetness of obedience by enjoying the blessings
afterward, but that certainly wasn’t suffering. I’ve been cajoled into obedience by parents and leaders, but
I don’t know that can be called suffering either.
The only thing I can think of is if
that suffering happened as Jesus had to make righteous choices and do His
Father’s will. We are told
elsewhere that Jesus said, “I do not my own will, but His that sent me.” We
often think those righteous choices were easy and painless for Jesus, but what
if they weren’t? What if it was
just as hard for Him to give up His own will in favor of what Heavenly Father
wanted as it is for anyone else? I
wonder what kind of pain Jesus went through as He worked to reconcile His own
will to Heavenly Father’s. Still, we know He yielded willingly. Every. Single. Time. Knowing what I know of my own
stubbornness, that gives me a huge respect for Jesus’s righteousness.
It’s also possible that part of the
learning obedience through suffering happened as Jesus was stretched by what
Heavenly Father asked Him to do.
Growing from grace to grace, He must have been stretched almost constantly.
Hmm, maybe I've learned obedience through suffering more than I thought.
What do you think? Can you think of any other way Jesus
might have learned obedience through suffering?
3 comments:
Wow! What a great insight. No, I can't think of another way he would have suffered to learn obedience. Thanks so much for sharing this. Perfect ending to FHE.
Suffering implies that you are knowingly giving up your choice for the will of the father. If you didnt know what you were giving up could it be coined "suffering."
Glad it helped, Rozy Lass.
Hi Anonymous, usually when we give something up we know what it is and we know that we wanted it, but it is harder to know exactly what following the Father's will bring into our lives. You do make a good point that uncertainty or ignorance can contribute to suffering as we learn obedience.
Thanks for stopping by.
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