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ALONE
WITH GOD
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Spiritual Answers and Reasons
for Faith |
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THE
PRIESTHOOD OF CHRIST
"Thou art a Priest forever after the order of
Melchizedek."-HEBREWS vii. 17.
VARIOUS fancies have gathered
around the person of Melchizedek, investing him with
extraordinary qualities; but it is better far to think of
him simply as the head or chieftain of a large family or
clan, which gathered around the site to be known, in after
years, as the holy city." Already its name was
shadowed forth in the term "Salem," which
designated the clustered rude huts or tents. Amid the
almost universal lawlessness and depravity which swept
over Palestine, righteousness and peace seem to have fled
for shelter to this little community, where alone due
reverence was given to the Most High God, possessor of
heaven and earth.
How this oasis had come into existence
amid the surrounding moral desert we cannot tell; but it
may have been due to the commanding personal influence of
the king, who, according to patriarchal custom, as father
of the family, was not only the ruler of the family life,
but leader in the family devotions; and thus, while
Melchizedek was king of Salem, he was also priest of the
Most High. Moreover, it would appear that he bore a
special commission, and was raised up for a specific
purpose, as the ordained messenger between God and men;
and as embodying a striking portraiture of the priesthood
to be exercised for man by the Son of God.
Note the significance of the words, made
like unto the Son of God (ver. 3). Christ's
eternal Priesthood vias the archetypal reality, after the
similitude of which that of Melchizedek was fashioned. It
was as if the Father could not await the day of his Son's
priestly entrance within the veil but must needs
anticipate the marvels of his ministry by embodying its
leading features in miniature. Let us now study some of
them.
CHRIST IS KING AS WELL AS PRIEST (ver.
1). History gives its unanimous judgment against the
temporal and the spiritual power being vested in the same
man. In Israel the two offices were kept rigorously
separate; and when, on one occasion, a king passed the
sacred barrier, and, snatching up a censer, strode into
the inner court, he was at once followed by the
remonstrances of the priestly band, whilst the white brand
of leprosy wrote his doom upon his brow; "and he
himself hastened to go out, because the Lord had smitten
him." But the simple monarch of whom we write, living
before gathering abuses forbade the union, combined in his
person the royal scepter and the sacerdotal censer. And
herein he foreshadowed the Christ.
Jesus is King and Priest. He is
King because he is a priest. He is highly
exalted, demanding homage from every knee, and confession
from every lip, because he became obedient to the death of
the cross. He bases his royal claims, not on hereditary
descent, though the blood of David flowed in his veins;
not on conquest or superior force; not on the legislation
that underpins the kingdom of heaven among men: but on
this, that he redeemed us to God by his blood. He is the
King of glory, because he is the Lamb of God which taketh
away the sin of the world. The cross was the
stepping-stone to his throne.
And he cannot fulfill his office
as Priest unless he be first recognized as King.
Many fail to derive all the blessing offered to men
through the Priesthood of Christ, because they are not
willing to admit his claims as King. They do not reverence
and obey him. They do not open the whole of the inner
realm to his scepter. They endeavor to serve two masters;
and to stand well with empires as different as light and
darkness, heaven and hell, God and Satan. There must be
consecration before there can be perfect faith; coronation
before deliverance; the King before the Priest.
The order is invariable first
King of Righteousness, and after that also King of Peace (ver.
2). " Peace, give us peace!" is the
importunate demand of men; peace at any price; by all
means peace. But God, in the deep waters, lays the
foundation of righteousness; "and the work of
righteousness shall be peace, and the effect of
righteousness quietness and assurance forever." It is
of no use to heal the wound slightly, saying, "Peace,
peace," when there is none. Infinitely better is it
to probe to the bottom, and to build up from a sound and
healthy foundation to the surface of the flesh. And the
King of Peace will never enter your soul until you have
first acknowledged him as King of Righteousness,
submitting yourself to his righteous claims, and
renouncing the righteousness which is of the law for that
which is by faith.
It is lamentable to find how few
Christians, comparatively, are realizing the full meaning
or power of Christianity. Joyless, fruitless, powerless,
they are a stumbling block to the world, and a mockery to
devils. And is not the reason here? They are not right.
They are harboring traitors and aliens in their souls.
They constantly condemn themselves in things that they
allow. No doubt they excuse themselves, and invent special
reasons to palliate their faults, so that what would be
inadmissible with others is pardonable in them. What
special pleading! What ingenious arguments! What gymnastic
feats are theirs! But all in vain. Let any such who read
these lines learn that it is peremptory to make Christ
King, and King of Righteousness, before ever they can
appreciate the peace which accrues from his Priesthood on
our behalf.
CHRIST'S PRIESTHOOD WAS NOT INHERITED (ver.
3). This also comes out clearly in the history of the
priest-king of Salem. The Levitical priest had carefully
to trace his connection with Aaron, and hence the
elaborate genealogies of which some parts of the Bible are
full. The priests, at the time of the return from Babylon,
who could not prove their pedigree, were suspended until a
priest arose with Urim and Thummim. But Melchizedek's
priesthood had evidently nothing to do with his descent.
He was independent of priestly pedigree. Of course it is
not necessary to infer that he really had no human
parentage and that he knew neither birth nor death. This
is neither stated nor assumed. The argument is simply
built on the omission of any reference to these events in
ordinary human life; and aims to prove that, therefore,
this old-world priesthood was quite independent of those
conditions which were of prime importance in the Levitical
dispensation. It was of an entirely different order from
that which officiated in the Jewish Temple; and was,
therefore, so capable to represent Christ's.
As God, our Lord had no mother. As man,
no father. He did not Spring from a family of priests; for
it is evident that our Lord sprang out of Judah, of which
tribe Moses spake nothing concerning the priesthood. What
was allegorically true of Melchizedek was literally true
of Jesus; who has had neither beginning of days nor end of
life. His Priesthood, therefore, is utterly unique. He
stands amongst men unrivaled. There have been none like
him before nor since. His functions derived from none,
shared by none, transmitted to none. Made what he was from
all eternity by the foreknowledge and counsel of God.
There never was a beginning to the
priestliness of our Saviour's heart. There is no date in
heaven's calendar for the uprising within him of mercy and
pity, and of the intention to stand as the Advocate and
Intercessor for our race. Before the mountains were
brought forth, or the heavens and earth were made, there
was already in his thoughts the germ of that marvelous
drama which is slowly unfolding before the gaze of the
universe. He was Priest, as well as the Lamb slain, from
before the foundation of the world. Love is eternal.
Sacrifice is one of the root principles of the being of
God. Priesthood is part of the texture of the nature of
the Second Person in the adorable Trinity. There need be
no fear, therefore, that he will ever desert his office;
or lay it aside for some other purpose; or cease to have
compassion on the ignorant and erring, the tempted and
fallen.
CHRIST'S PRIESTHOOD IS CONTINUAL (ver.
3). The priests of Aaron's line were not suffered to
continue by reason of death. But of him "it is
witnessed that he liveth" (ver. 8). Hallelujah! a
Priest has arisen "after the power of an endless
life" (ver. 16). "The Lord sware and will not
repent, Thou art a Priest forever" (ver.
21). "Because he abideth forever, his Priesthood is
unchangeable" (ver. 24). "He ever liveth to make
intercession" (ver. 25). "Consecrated
forevermore" (ver. 28). What explicit and abundant
testimony! Our High-Priest shall never ascend Mount Hor to
be stripped of his robes of office and die. The secrets
confided to him need never be told again to his successor.
The tender love which links him and us shall never be
snapped or cut in death. No one else will ever be called
in to take his place in the superintendence of our souls.
This teaching rebukes two errors-(1) The
error of those who teach sinlessness in the flesh.
It is impossible to exaggerate the mischief which is being
wrought just now by some who take advantage of the
universal yearning for a higher experience, and are
holding out to credulous souls the prospect of reaching a
position in which they will no longer need to confess sin,
no longer require perpetual cleansing in the blood of
Christ, no longer be sensible of their sinnership.
They who speak thus confound sin and sins.
They apply the term infirmity to
acts and dispositions which the Word of God calls by
blacker, darker names. This teaching lowers a man's
standard of sin to suit the erroneous doctrine which he
has imbibed. It is contrary to the distinct teaching of
Scripture that the flesh in the believer may yet lust for
the upper hand. It is in Opposition to all deeper
experience of the Christian life, which goes to show that,
even when we know nothing against ourselves, yet are we
not hereby justified; because there may be many evils of
which, for want of clearer light, we are completely
ignorant, but which stand out patent enough to the eye of
him who judges us, the Lord who searches the heart and
reins.
The error of those who teach the
perplexity if sacrificing priesthood. Of course
all believers are priests, in the sense of offering the
sacrifice of praise and prayer, the offerings of
self-denying love. But there are many among us who persist
in affirming that they are called, in addition, constantly
to offer the perpetual sacrifice of Calvary, in the
elements of the Lord's Supper. Amid the ceremonial of the
mass, as offered in too many of our English churches by
professed Protestants, claiming to be priests, it is hard
to see any trace of the simple institution of the Lord's
Supper. And it makes one tingle with righteous indignation
to see the way in which these blind leaders of the blind
are deceiving the multitudes to the ruin of their soul
Sometimes one longs for the withering sarcasm of an
Erasmus, the sturdy common sense of a Latimer, the
vehemence of a Knox, to show up the unscriptural
pretensions of these men, tricked out in the gaudy finery
of pagan costumes, and going through mummeries which would
provoke to laughter, if the whole system were not so
inexpressibly sad. "How long, 0 Lord, how long!"
But, after all, the true way to meet
these errors is to insist upon our Lord's continual and
unchangeable intercession and priesthood. Surely if he
lives and continues his work, it is a piece of impertinent
and arrogant folly to intrude upon his functions. We must
revert to the earlier methods of Scriptural interpretation
and exposition before ever we shall be able to forearm our
young people against the monstrous errors of our times, or
win back those who have been so disastrously led astray.
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