Jesus' Humiliation and Exaltation: For Your Sake

Jesus' Humiliation and Exaltation: For Your Sake
Pastor Peter Metzger

Jesus' Humiliation and Exaltation: For Your Sake

I have three pictures I want to show you today. First, I want to ask you if you recognize them, i.e. if you can identify them. Then, I want to know if you can tell me what all three have in common.

The first picture is the cover art for Disney’s 1990 animated short The Prince and the Pauper starring Mickey Mouse in both roles. The second is a still shot from Disney’s 1992 animated classic Aladdin showing Princess Jasmine in a peasant’s outfit. The third is more cover art, this time for the 2010 reality TV show Undercover Boss.

What do all three pictures have in common? They all feature a very prominent public figure – a powerful, authority figure – disguising themselves to blend in with the general public.

What makes each of these stories compelling is not so much the disguise, but the reason behind it. Do you know why the prince wanted to trade places with the pauper – or, for that matter, why Princess Jasmine pretended to be a peasant? Ultimately, it’s curiosity. They just wanted to know what life would be like if they weren’t in the public eye.

What about the undercover boss? Do you know why they went undercover? Maybe to do some quality control, but also because they wanted unfiltered feedback to make their employees’ lives better.

Our focus for worship this morning is on what theologians call Jesus’ states of humiliation and exaltation. And if we’re not careful, we can easily lump Jesus in with Mickey Mouse, Princess Jasmine, and reality TV, because there is a similarity that Jesus shares with all three. Can you tell me what it is? Jesus is a prominent, powerful, authority figure who did disguise himself to blend in. But, the disguise is different and so is the reason behind it.

Paul talks about it this way in his letter to the Philippians: Christ Jesus, who, being in very nature God, did not consider equality with God something to be used to his own advantage; rather, he made himself nothing by taking the very nature of a servant, being made in human likeness. And being found in appearance as a man, he humbled himself by becoming obedient to death – even death on a cross![1]

Now, Paul says that Jesus was “found in appearance as a man,” but Jesus didn’t just swap a crown for a peasant’s cap. How was Jesus’ human appearance different, i.e. more, than a costume? Jesus wasn’t pretending. He really was human! That’s why Paul says that he took “the very nature of a servant” and that he was “made in human likeness.”

And when Jesus was “made human” that meant that he had to endure everything that came along with it, including all those things we confess in the Apostles’ Creed: conceived by the Holy Spirit, born of the virgin Mary, suffered under Pontius Pilate, crucified, died, and was buried. Just about everything between Jesus’ conception and his burial comprise what theologians call Jesus’ “state of humiliation.”

What do you typically think of when hear the word “humiliation”? Embarrassment, right? If I split my pants in public or gave the wrong answer in school, I might be embarrassed, i.e. humiliated. That’s not quite what we’re talking about with Jesus, though. He wasn’t embarrassed by those things, but he was humbled in the sense that his status was lowered.

Think about Jesus’ conception as just one example. How would becoming a fetus in the uterus of the virgin Mary be a step down in status for Jesus? Remember who he is. Before he was born – from eternity – Jesus always has been the almighty Son of God. The Apostle John reminds us that Jesus was essential to the creative process of the universe (nothing was made that has been made without Jesus).

But when he was conceived, the Creator was confined to a very small space within his creation. He became dependent on his mother for life itself. After he was born, she changed his diapers. As he grew up, he obeyed her and Joseph’s orders. Every step along his earthly life, Jesus was taking successive steps down farther and farther away from the immortal glory that he rightfully deserved as the almighty Son of God.

That’s what we mean by Jesus’ “state of humiliation.” That’s his “disguise,” if you will. There are all kinds of “how” questions we could ask. I don’t think they would be particularly helpful. The one answer God does give us in Scripture is “why.”

Usually, we would do everything within our power to avoid this kind of humiliation. But Jesus not only endured it, he exposed himself to it willingly. And not because he was bored in heaven or curious about how the commonfolk carry on. He did it for you.

You are the reason that Jesus became human. You are the reason that Jesus suffered indignity and pain far below his position. You are the reason Jesus died. Because you are not like Jesus.

You are not, like Jesus, “in very nature God.” But when did that ever stop you from trying to claim an equality with God to be used to your own advantage? That’s a story that predates 1990s Disney or even 1890s Mark Twain. It’s a tale as old as time, and a temptation we read about from the very beginning.

“You will not certainly die,” the serpent said to the woman. “For God knows that when you eat from it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil.”[2]

How did the devil make eating the forbidden fruit sound appealing to Eve? He said it would make her like God. That is exactly the temptation that is at the root of so many sins we commit, from something as simple as common, everyday road rage to the much more serious sins of secret and outright idolatry.

You’re driving to church on an otherwise quiet Sunday morning when out of the blue someone cuts you off on the Henday. What do you say? (Don’t answer that!) “Hello! I’m right here! Earth to Toyota! Pay attention to the people around you (so that I can drive the way I want to).” As if that other driver should have no other concern in the world than to get out of your way.

It’s the same thing with the way people walk in the aisles at Costco, or the demands your boss makes of you at work, or the unreliability of your dayhome provider, or the bickering and backbiting of your family. When we walk through life with main character energy, when we put ourselves at the centre of our own solar systems, we are elevating ourselves to equality with (or maybe even superiority over) God himself.

Whenever we complain about anything – whether that be out loud to others or just internally as we silently stew on stuff – we’re betraying a sense of entitlement that is wholly unlike Jesus. He had every reason to claim equality with God as the most valid excuse not to do any of the things that we confess in the Apostles’ Creed. But why did he do them? For you.

For you know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though he was rich, yet for your sake he became poor, so that you through his poverty might become rich.[3]

Why did Jesus become poor? For your sake. So you might become rich.


 

Jesus did it for you, because he loves you. And because he loves you, even all those incredible sacrifices he made for you to be humiliated for you were worth it to him, if that meant that you could be exalted with him; if it meant that your sins – even your sins of elevating yourself to equality with God – could be forgiven and washed away and redeemed and rectified; if it meant that you could be saved.

It was worth it to Jesus to be made poor so that you could be made rich. It was worth it to Jesus to give up his right to be served by you so that he could serve you with the sacrifice of his body and blood. It was worth it to Jesus to become obedient to death on a cross so that you could live in the peace of his love now and always.

And because Jesus was willing to humble himself to this degree, his Father saw fit to exalt him eternally: Therefore God exalted him to the highest place and gave him the name that is above every name, that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, in heaven and on earth and under the earth, and every tongue acknowledge that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father.[4]

That’s what we do today – we acknowledge that Jesus Christ is our Lord and is worthy of all our thanks and praise, and that his Father is worthy of all the glory possible for giving us his Son to forgive us our sin.

I could preach a whole sermon on each upward step of Jesus’ exaltation and tell you all about how each one restored a glory that Jesus had set aside, for a while, while he was on earth. And that would be entirely worth our time. We could spend every minute of every day meditating on the power, majesty, wisdom, and honour he deserves and not exhaust our opportunities for praise. But what I find so amazing about Jesus’ exaltation is how – just like his humiliation – it wasn’t (just) for him. It means something for you too.

But Christ has indeed been raised from the dead, the firstfruits of those who have fallen asleep.[5]

Why does Paul refer to Jesus as the firstfruits of those who have fallen asleep? What does Jesus’ resurrection mean for you? It means that you will rise from the dead too, and so will all who fall asleep in him – your mother, your father, your grandparents, your friends and fellow church members. Everyone who falls asleep in him, will be raised with him.

“Where, O death, is your victory? Where, O death, is your sting?” The sting of death is sin, and the power of sin is the law. But thanks be to God! He gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ.[6]

Jesus’ descent into hell wasn’t a continuation of his suffering. It was the occasion of declaring his victory over death and the devil. What do you suppose that declaration means for you? It means that his victory is your victory and death has no sting. He’s taken away its teeth and robbed it of its power by forgiving your sin and giving you life as your victor’s crown.

“Do not let your hearts be troubled. You believe in God; believe also in me. My Father’s house has many rooms; if that were not so, would I have told you that I am going there to prepare a place for you? And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come back and take you to be with me that you also may be where I am.”[7]

Jesus prepared his disciples for his eventual ascension into heaven. What does he want you to know about why he went there? He is preparing a place for you. There’s a space in heaven with your name on it. He will come back to take you to be with him so that you can always be where he is.

God placed all things under his feet and appointed him to be head over everything for the church.[8]

What is Jesus doing now that he is restored to his rightful position at the right hand of his Father in heaven? He is ruling over everything for your good. Nothing is outside of his control. He works all things for your eternal good.

You know, sometimes when we get into these catechetical concepts they can seem abstract, theoretical, theological, or – in plain English – kind of dry and boring. But this week in my life was a perfect example of why these things matter.

My dad is dying. And harder than seeing his body grow progressively weaker and his life ebb away, is the guilt and remorse and regret that you can read in his eyes. Who of us, faced with the very real prospect of our very near mortality, wouldn’t look back on life haunted by the things we wished we had done differently.

But that’s exactly why Jesus humbled himself (was conceived, crucified, died, and was buried) – to take away your guilt and silence your shame, to smother them in his mercy and grace so that you can let go of them and live (and die) in his peace, knowing that your sins are forgiven by his sacrifice on the cross.

More than that, that’s also exactly why Jesus was exalted (rose from the dead, ascended, and is seated at the right hand in heaven) – to give you confidence that you too will rise and so will all who call on his name; to comfort you with the knowledge that even when cancer claims lives and loved ones languish in hospitals, he sits in power overseeing it all for you. You do not suffer alone and you will not suffer forever, because the Son is with the Father and he is doing everything within his power to ensure that someday you will be there too.  

Jesus isn’t Mickey Mouse, Princess Jasmine, or your Undercover Boss. He is your Saviour who became your brother to live and die and rise again for your sake, so that through his poverty you might be exalted with him to the riches of his Father’s house in heaven forever.

This is most certainly true. Amen.  


[1] Philippians 2:5-8

[2] Genesis 3:4,5

[3] 2 Corinthians 8:9

[4] Philippians 2:9-11

[5] 1 Corinthians 15:20

[6] 1 Corinthians 15:55-57

[7] John 14:1-3

[8] Ephesians 1:22

You Are Bought by Jesus' Blood

You Are Bought by Jesus' Blood
Vicar Jon Marquardt

The Second Article of THE APOSTLES’ CREED

I believe in Jesus Christ, his only Son our Lord,
   who was conceived by the Holy Spirit, born of the virgin Mary,
   suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, died, and was buried.
   He descended into hell. The third day he rose again from the dead.
   He ascended into heaven and is seated at the right hand of God the Father almighty.
   From there he will come to judge the living and the dead.

What does this mean?

I believe that Jesus Christ,
   true God, begotten of the Father from eternity,
   and also true man, born of the virgin Mary, is my Lord.

He has redeemed me, a lost and condemned creature,
   purchased and won me from all sins,
from death, and from the power of the devil,
   not with gold or silver but with his holy, precious blood
and with his innocent suffering and death.             

All this he did that I should be his own, and live under him in his kingdom,
   and serve him in everlasting righteousness, innocence, and blessedness,
   just as he has risen from death and lives and rules eternally.

This is most certainly true.

You are bought by jesus’ blood

Are you familiar with the game show The Price Is Right? If you haven’t seen it recently, here’s the gist: contestants try to guess the retail value of different items, from groceries to a new car. Whoever comes closest to the actual price—without going over—wins and gets to take the item home. I have recently learned that our TV package comes with a 24-hour The Price Is Right channel (for better or for worse), and it inspired me to try playing it this Sunday.

We’ll start out low and get pricier as we go. (Answers found at the bottom of the page.)

What’s the price of…

                        A medium Double Double coffee from Tim Horton’s?
                        $ _ . _ _ [a]

                        A 1050 piece LEGO Star Wars R2-D2™ set from LEGO.com?
                        $ _ _ _ . _ _ [b]

                        A VIP ticket to Canada’s World Cup match in Los Angeles against South Africa?
                        $ _ , _ _ _ [c]

                        One gram of antimatter?
                        $ _ _ , _ _ _ , _ _ _ , _ _ _ , _ _ _ [d]

Now, something a little different. What about the price of…

                        Your happiness?
                        Your love?
                        Your freedom?
                        You?

Some things are hard to put a price on. Some things just can’t be bought. Happiness, love, freedom—certainly not people. At least, not in countries like ours, where citizens are born with rights and liberties that can’t be taken away‚ let alone bought or sold. The very suggestion that we might be items for sale is not only detestable, it’s unimaginable. Privileged as we are, we have next to no concept of what it is to be owned, to be enslaved and bound to someone else’s will.

So it might be difficult for us to visualize what we confess in the explanation to the Second Article of the Apostles’ Creed: we were purchased. We belonged to someone else. And in fact, we still belong to someone else.

If that sounds somewhat offensive to our egalitarian ears, it’s nothing new. People didn’t like hearing it from Jesus, either. Here’s a scene from John 8: To the Jews who had believed him, Jesus said, “If you hold to my teaching, you are really my disciples. Then you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.”[1]

On the surface, Jesus’ words seemed like good news! But what does Jesus imply by offering to set them free? That they weren’t free already! That’s what the Jews took issue with. They answered him, “We are Abraham’s descendants and have never been slaves of anyone. How can you say that we shall be set free?”[2]

Now, if you know anything at all about Bible history, you can do a quick fact check: Had the Jews ever been slaves? Absolutely they had! 400 years under Pharaoh’s thumb in Egypt; a generation of exile in Babylon; and their current status in the Roman Empire, while not exactly enslavement, could hardly be considered “independent” or “sovereign.”

But Jesus had much more than political oppression in mind. They had no idea of the shackles fastened around their souls. Jesus replied, “Very truly I tell you, everyone who sins is a slave to sin.”[3]

You can imagine why the Jews didn’t like hearing that. Especially this week, when hundreds of millions across the continent will be celebrating their country’s foundational values of equality and freedom. We don’t like to be told what to do, and we really don’t like to be told we don’t have a choice. But Jesus states pretty definitively that we are not as independent as we would like to think.

The apostle Paul doesn’t leave any more wiggle room than Jesus did: Don’t you know that when you offer yourselves to someone as obedient slaves, you are slaves of the one you obey?[4] Or as the apostle Peter put it: People are slaves to whatever has mastered them.[5]

Your Canada Day outfit probably won’t have any chains among the patriotic paraphernalia. But sometimes there may as well be. We are all too comfortable handing the reins over to things that want to master us. Maybe it’s the bottle that disguises itself as a way to celebrate, but ends up dragging you by the collar to do and say things you never wanted to, hurting people you never thought you could. Maybe it’s the social media site that poses as a way to exercise free speech, but before you know it has you bearing arms against neighbours whom you’ve never met, yet whose words have been judged unworthy of your forgiveness. Maybe you serve a bank account that has an insatiable appetite, or the downtime that recklessly shoves responsibilities to the side, or the smartphone that fixes you up with a custom-made comfort concoction that sucks you in before your conscience even has time to react.

We have more experience with slavery than we think. Sometimes we can almost forget the chains are there—until they yank us back into the old routines we thought we’d left behind. Paul experienced that same struggle with sin, and here’s how he described it: I know that good itself does not dwell in me, that is, in my sinful nature. For I have the desire to do what is good, but I cannot carry it out. For I do not do the good I want to do, but the evil I do not want to do—this I keep on doing. So I find this law at work: Although I want to do good, evil is right there with me.[6]

It’s a vicious cycle, and no amount of discipline or determination can break us out of it completely. In fact, slavery to sin is the most natural thing we know. It’s the legal status passed on by our ancestors, the only birthright anyone can claim with no registration required. It goes all the way back to when Adam and Eve traded their true freedom for fetters and secured their spots as the devil’s first human cellmates.

Those are the chains we were born into. And if you dare to dream that you can rise above it or earn your way out, think again. These chains come with a hefty price tag—one you don’t have to guess because Scripture spells it out for us: The wages of sin is death.[7] Every one of us was born a lost and condemned creature, held captive by sin and doomed to obey it until we faced the eternal punishment we deserve. There’s no escape, no secret tunnel, no one who isn’t in prison with us already and so no one to come to our aid.

And then, at the 11th hour, into this grim graveyard of souls comes the Lord Jesus. He is the God-man, the hero of humanity, the champion going to fight on our behalf. He is the climax to a tragedy that suddenly becomes a victory. Jesus wasn’t willing to let you remain lost and condemned, so he took on the task of redeeming you—buying you back from your sins, from death, from the devil’s power.

And it wasn’t cheap. We read this verse last week: No one can redeem the life of another or give to God a ransom for them—the ransom for a life is costly, no payment is ever enough.[8]

God doesn’t accept any form of currency we have to offer. You can’t write a cheque to undo all the hurtful words you’ve said. You could sooner buy enough antimatter to fill a mansion than you could pay your way not only out of hell but into heaven.

But Jesus could offer something infinitely more valuable. Peter puts it this way: You know that it was not with perishable things such as silver or gold that you were redeemed from the empty way of life handed down to you from your ancestors, but with the precious blood of Christ, a lamb without blemish or defect.[9]

Jesus didn’t settle for sending an eTransfer from heaven’s vaults. What was the ransom price that Jesus paid for our redemption? It was his own holy, precious blood. Generally speaking, what is it that makes something like gold or silver valuable? How rare it is, how hard it is to find. The rarer something is, the more valuable it is. Antimatter is worth tens of trillions per gram because there is less than a gram of it in the whole universe. But nothing is rarer, and thus more precious, than God’s own blood—something that shouldn’t even be possible. Yet Jesus willingly, almost wastefully, spilled it all on the cross for us, pouring himself out to extinguish the fires of hell that surrounded us.

Our redemption took more than a transaction. It took a complete transferral, an exchange that we could never have negotiated for ourselves because it’s so one-sided in our favour. As Paul explains it: God made him who had no sin to be sin for us, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God.[10] On that cross, the spotless Lamb of God took on the depths of our depravity. Every sinful thought, word, or action that has ever shackled you with shame or guilt was lifted off of you and nailed onto Jesus to pay the price. And in its place, what does Paul say we get? The righteousness of God. Even better than a blank slate that we might go get dirty again; instead, it’s Jesus’ perfect record that gets fastened onto you, to permanently change your status from forsaken slave to forgiven saint.

You are redeemed. You have been bought back, purchased and won from all sins, from death, and from the power of the devil. That’s more than just a historical fact, something to be commemorated by a barbecue and a day off of work. Our redemption shapes every day of our lives.

Jesus told the Jews the grim truth that everyone who sins is a slave to sin. But the Son of God came to give us a new master. So if the Son sets you free, you will be free indeed.[11] By paying your ransom price, Jesus set you free from slavery to sin. Your shameful chains are broken and your guilty stains are washed away. He promises: As far the east is from the west, so far has he removed our transgressions from us.[12] Or as Paul says, There is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.[13] We get to live in the peace of that forgiveness every day, knowing that there is no price left to be paid.

Jesus also set you free from slavery to death. He paid for more than the free trial period of your existence—he paid for your eternity. We skipped the second half of this verse earlier: The wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.[14] Even though we’ll still experience temporal death, what lies on the other side of it? Eternal life! The grave is nothing but a gateway to life that only takes a moment to pass through. We don’t have to fear dying or despair at a Christian’s passing because death has lost its painful grip on us forever, swallowed up in Christ’s victory.

Finally, Jesus set you free from slavery to the devil. The old evil foe wants nothing more than to entangle you in the tendrils of his temptations like he did to Adam and Eve. He knows that if he can just convince you that he still has you wrapped around his finger, you’ll wander back into his chains yourself. But Satan has no power over you—sin is the only hold he had on you, and Jesus took that away once and for all. When you hear the lies and accusations he hisses in your ear, claiming you have no choice but to give in and suffer the shame, look up and see that the serpent’s head still lies crushed beneath Christ’s feet. The power that put the devil down is the same power you have to run from temptation and safely into the arms of your loving Lord. That’s why he gives you his Word—to equip you to defend against temptation with the promises you are not a slave to sin anymore.

This is what it means to confess the truth that Jesus is your Redeemer.
You can’t put a price on happiness—but Jesus guarantees you endless joy in the riches of heaven.
You can’t put a price on love—but Jesus freely pours out his forgiving love for you every day.
You can’t put a price on freedom—but Jesus spared no expense to set you free from slavery to sin, death, and the devil and bring you into his tender care.
All so that you would be his own. All to be your Lord and your Redeemer.
So rest in the peace of knowing that the blood of God’s Son has given you what money could never buy.

This is most certainly true. Amen.


[a] $1.83

[b] $129.99 (not bad for a LEGO set!)

[c] $3,377

[d] $88.72 trillion (converted from USD), according to “the experts.”

[1] John 8:31,32

[2] John 8:33

[3] John 8:34

[4] Romans 6:16a

[5] 2 Peter 2:19b

[6] Romans 7:18,19,21

[7] Romans 6:23

[8] Psalm 49:7,8

[9] 1 Peter 1:18,19

[10] 2 Corinthians 5:21

[11] John 8:36

[12] Psalm 103:12

[13] Romans 8:1

[14] Romans 6:23