Scars of Ordination: The Perfected High Priest
Hebrews 7-10
"In the days of His humanity, He offered up both prayers and pleas with loud crying and tears to the One able to save Him from death, and He was heard because of His devout behavior. Although He was a Son, He learned obedience from the things which He suffered. And having been perfected, He became the source of eternal salvation for all those who obey Him, being designated by God as High Priest according to the order of Melchizedek."
I have questions.
Did Jesus learn obedience in the sense of moving from disobedience to obedience?
My belief is that he was sinless, he never once disobeyed the Father.
So what does it mean he learned obedience?
Think of it like this. A master musician doesn’t "learn" music by going from bad to good; he deepens his mastery through difficult performances. Jesus "learned" obedience by encountering real human weakness, temptation, pain, and the full weight of what submission to the Father would require from us. Something none of has ever fully learned.
He learned what obedience felt like in His humanity.
Okay...but, how could the perfect Lord be "perfected" (teleiōtheis)? Wouldn't that contradict the rest of scripture?
As I understand it, He was already perfect, in His divine nature. But in his human nature He needed to go through the full process of suffering, temptation, and obedience as a man in order to become the perfect representative and sacrifice for humanity.
The "as a man" is the feature substance of the process. It seems that this is about completing a calling, like an ordination process. The eternal Son didn’t need perfecting. The incarnate Son, our representative, did. Not morally, but vocationally.
"having been perfected"/ "made complete"
Brought to a full stature or qualification for an office.
Jesus, as our High Priest, went through the ultimate "ordination process". Not in a temple, but in real human life under suffering. This is why the author says He was "designated by God as High Priest according to the order of Melchizedek" after the perfection through his suffering (Hebrews 5:10).
In many traditions, a person can be fully qualified in knowledge and character, but they still must complete the formal process (education, examination, laying on of hands, and public commissioning) before they can function in the office of the High priest (or any ordained minister).
Jesus’ "ordination" was the cross.
He had been tested in every way. He had been faithful. Through loud cries, tears, full submission, and death itself, He completed the process that qualified Him. And having completed his course He entered the heavenly sanctuary with His own blood.
And here's the linchpin; in His resurrection the Father laid His hands upon Him, completing the commission as High Priest (Hebrews 5:9–10). The final ordination act that publicly installed the incarnate Son into His eternal priestly office.
And scripture backs this claim up:
Romans 1:4 – Jesus was "declared to be the Son of God with power by the resurrection from the dead."
Acts 2:36 – "God has made Him both Lord and Christ — this Jesus whom you crucified."
Philippians 2:8–9 – "He humbled Himself by becoming obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross. Therefore God highly exalted Him…"
The suffering → His obedience → And His death was the costly process.
And the resurrection was the Father’s affirmative response and commissioning. Once again, the resurrection is what ALL the gospel rests upon.
All of this shows that the resurrection was not just a happy ending, it was the necessary completion of His priestly qualification. It can seem primitive and obscene even, but we are primitive. And God communicates His mystery to us in primitive form. He became man to meet the primitive as one who is likewise primitive. And He accomplished (finished) divine justice and glory by primitive means. God stooped to our level.
We are primitive. Human beings are dust and breath, capable of great beauty and terrible cruelty. We understand blood, sacrifice, death, and vindication at the most basic, visceral level. So God speaks to us in the language we can actually grasp.
God (the incarnate Son) died a primitive death; naked, bleeding, publicly shamed on a Roman cross. And He was raised in a primitive way; bodily, physical, touchable.
Did it ever seem to you (as it did with me), odd that the resurrected Lord was seen among His witnesses in his human form, complete with the scars of his bloody execution? Wouldn't it seem like he should be perfected in every way, spirit and body? Shouldn't He be seen as flawless, radiant, "perfect" in body with no trace of suffering?
But that's the thing isn't it?
The same God who met us in blood, sweat, nails, and an empty tomb chose to keep those marks in the risen Lord.
Why?
Maybe because those scars in his human form are not defects, but they are His Glory. That’s the stunning reversal. What the world (and our natural minds) would call hideous and shameful (the marks of torture and execution) God transformed into the eternal emblems of victory and love.
Do you see then why it was important that Jesus not been seen as an apparition (Gnostic theology)?
John 20:20
"When He had said this, He showed them His hands and His side. Then the disciples were glad when they saw the Lord."
�The scars were the proof and the cause of their (and our) joy.
In the very center of heaven, John sees...
Revelation 5:6
"a Lamb standing, as though it had been slain."
Even in the throne room of God, for all eternity, Christ is visibly marked by His sacrifice. The scars are the trophies of His obedience.
Full circle:
And what a powerful, sobering, and glorious circle it is.
Remember what we read. He "learned obedience from the things which He suffered…and having been perfected, He became the source of eternal salvation…"
The scars are the visible evidence that His vocational perfection as High Priest is complete.
You can argue about states of being. About whether or not Jesus was a real man. But you can't argue the scars away. You can't deny the resurrection of Jesus Christ. The scars are the undeniable proof.
You cannot argue them away.
You cannot spiritualize them into symbols.
You cannot deny the physical, bodily resurrection of the God-Man who still carries the wounds of His execution.
Those scars are the final receipt.
They are the visible evidence that the incarnate Son completed His calling as a man. The Father laid His hands on Him in resurrection and declared the ordination finished. The High Priest according to the order of Melchizedek now stands; scarred, glorified, and alive forever.
You won't be standing there before Him when your time comes, and argue with Him about how he (the man) finished His (divine) ordination. His resurrection body (scars and all) will humble your rebellious spirit. You'll be on your knees (Philippians 2:10-11). And you'd better hope your name is written in His book (Revelation 21:27).
The Good News:
Here is the mercy in this same truth. Those scars are not there to condemn you; they are there to save you.
The One who bears those scars is the same High Priest who is able to save completely those who draw near to God through Him, because He always lives to intercede (Hebrews 7:25).
He didn’t keep the scars to shame us.
He kept them so we could have bold access to the throne of grace.
Amen?
Amen. 🙏🏼