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TEACHING
BY CONTRAST
"How much more shall the blood of Christ, who
through the Eternal Spirit offered himself without spot
to God, purge your conscience from dead works to serve
the living God! "HEBREWS ix. 14.
IN
this marvelous paragraph (vv. 6-14) there are five
striking and well-defined contrasts between the picture
symbols of Leviticus, and the realities revealed in the
New Testament Scriptures. And to their consideration we
will at once proceed, thanking God as we do so that we
live in the very midst of the heavenly things themselves,
rather than in the shadows, which, though they doubtless
helped and nourished the devout souls of an earlier age,
were confessedly inadequate to supply the deeper demands
of man's spiritual life.
THE FIRST TABERNACLE IS CONTRASTED WITH
THE TRUE (vv. 6, 8, 11). It must have been a fair and
lovely sight to behold, when first, on the plains of
Sinai, the Tabernacle was reared, with its golden
furniture and sumptuous drapery. The very angels may have
desired to look into it, and trace the outlines of
thoughts, which perhaps were only beginning to unfold
themselves to their intelligence. But fair though it was,
it had in it all those traces of imperfection which
necessarily attach to human workmanship, and make even a
needle-point seem coarse beneath the microscope. It was
"made with hands." Besides which it was destined
to grow old, and perish beneath the gnawing tooth or fret
of time. Already it must have shown signs of decay when it
was carefully borne across the Jordan; and, in David's
days, its venerable associations could not blind him to
the necessity of replacing it as soon as possible.
How different to this is the true
tabernacle, of which it was the type, which is so much
"greater and more perfect." What is that
tabernacle? and where? Sometimes it seems to pious musing
as if the whole universe were one great temple; the
mountains its altars; the seas and oceans, with their vast
depths, its lavers; the heavens its blue curtains; the
loftier spaces, with their stars and mystery of color, and
fragrant incense-breath and angel worship, its holy place;
whilst the very throne-room of God, where the Seer's eye
beheld the rainbow-circled throne, corresponds to the most
holy place in which the light of the Shekinah glistened
over the blood-stained mercy seat.
But such poetic flights are forbidden
by the sober prose which tells us that the true tabernacle
is not "of this creation" (ver. 11). It is no
part of this created world, whether earth or heaven; it
would exist, though all the material universe should
resolve itself into primeval chaos; it is a spiritual
fabric, whose aisles are trodden by saintly spirits in
their loftiest experiences, when, forgetting that they are
creatures of time, they rise into communion with God, and
enjoy rapturous moments, which seem ages in their wealth
of blessed meaning. Such is the true tabernacle which the
Lord pitched, and not man (viii. 2).
THE HIGH-PRIESTS ARE CONTRASTED WITH
CHRIST (vv.7,11). The outer court of the sanctuary might
be trodden, under certain conditions, by ordinary
Israelites; but for the most part they were excluded, and
service was rendered by Levites and priests, at the head
of whom stood the high-priest, radiant in his garments of
glory and beauty. The garment of fine white linen worn
next his person; the linen girdle girt about his loins
fitting him for ministry (John xiii. 4); the robe of the
ephod, woven all of blue, and fringed with scarlet tassels
in the form of pomegranates; the ephod itself, composed of
the same materials as constituted the veil; and on his
breast the twelve precious stones, engraven with the names
of Israel. How grand a spectacle was there!
And yet there were two fatal flaws. He
was not suffered to continue by reason of death (vii. 23);
and he was a sinful man, who needed to offer sacrifice for
himself (ix. 7). On the great day of atonement, it was
expressly stated that he was not to go within the veil to
plead for the people, until he had made an atonement for
himself and his house by the blood of the young bullock,
which he had previously killed (Lev. xvi. II, 12, 13).
In these respects, how different is our
High-Priest, after the order of Melchizedek! Death tried
to master him; but he could not be holden of it; and by
death he destroyed him that hath the power of death.
"He continueth ever." "He ever liveth."
His priesthood is unchangeable. "He is a priest
forever." All this was clearly proved in the seventh
chapter. But now it is asserted that he was "without
spot" (ver. 14). He was well searched; but none could
convince him of sin. Judas tried to find some warrant for
his treachery, but was compelled to confess that it was
innocent blood. Caiaphas and Annas called in false
witnesses in vain; and at last condemned him on words
uttered by his own lips, claiming divine authority and
power. Pilate repeatedly asseverated, even washing his
hands in proof, that he could find in him no fault at all.
Nay, the Lord himself bared his breast
to the Father in conscious innocence; unlike the
saintliest of men, who, in proportion to their goodness,
confess their sinnership. "Such a High-Priest became
us, who is holy, harmless, undefiled, and separate from
sinners, who needeth not daily to offer up sacrifice for
his own sins.
THE VEILED WAY INTO THE HOLIEST IS
CONTRASTED WITH OUR FREEDOM TO ENTER THE PRESENCE OF GOD.
We have the positive assurance of these words that the
Holy Spirit meant to signify direct spiritual truth in the
construction of the Jewish Tabernacle (ver. 8). He who
revealed divine truth by inspired prophets, revealed it so
in the structure of the material edifice. The methods of
instruction might vary; the teacher was the same. Indeed,
the whole ritual was a parable for the present time (ver.
9).
Every well-taught child is aware of the
distinction between the holy place, with its candlesticks,
incense-table, and shew-bread, and the holy of holies,
with its ark, and cloud of glory. The first tabernacle was
separated from the second by heavy curtains, which were
never drawn aside except by the high-priest, and by him
only once a year, and then in connection with an unusually
solemn ritual. Surely the dullest Israelite must have
understood the meaning of that expressive figure; and have
felt that, even though his race might claim to be nearer
to God than all mankind beside, yet there was a depth of
intimacy from which his foot was checked by the
prohibition of God himself. "The way into the holiest
was not yet made manifest."
For us, however, the veil is rent.
Jesus entered once into the holy place, and as he passed
the heavy folds were rent in twain from the top to the
bottom. Surely no priest that witnessed it could ever
forget the moment, when, as the earth trembled beneath the
temple floor, the thickly woven veil split and fell back,
and disclosed the solemnities on which no eyes but those
of the high-priest dared to gaze. Surely the most obtuse
can read the meaning signified herein by the Holy Ghost.
There is no veil between us and God but that which we
weave by our own sin or ignorance. We may go into the very
secrets of his love. We may stand unabashed where angels
worship with veiled faces. We may behold mysteries hidden
from before the foundation of the world. The love of God
has no secrets for us whom he calls friends.
Oh, why are we so content with the
superficial and the transient, with the ephemeral gossip
and literature of our times, with the outer courts in
which the formalists and worldly Christians around us are
contented to remain? when there are such heights and
depths, such lengths and breadths, to be explored in the
very nature of God. Why do men in our time bring back that
veil, though they call it "a screen"? Alas, they
are blind leaders of the blind.
THE RITES OF JUDAISM ARE CONTRASTED
WITH CONSCIENCE-CLEANSING ORDINANCES OF THE GOSPEL. They
stood in meats and drinks and divers washings, which at
the best were carnal ordinances imposed until a time of
reformation; and though they rendered the worshiper
ceremonially clean, they left his conscience unappeased.
A great many of the offenses which
required to be put away in those olden days arose from the
breach of ceremonial laws. A man who touched the dead or
the unclean became ceremonially defiled. For any such
thing he must undergo the appointed rites of cleansing,
ere he could enter the courts of the Lord's house. The
ceremonial laws were quite competent to deal with
delinquencies like these; but they failed in providing
atonement or in securing pardon for acts of sin.
"They could not make him that did the service
perfect, as pertaining to the conscience."
The unsatisfactory nature of sacrifices
was even patent on the great day of atonement, which is
here evidently referred to. Laying aside the gorgeous
robes in which he was usually arrayed, the high-priest
clothed himself in simple linen. The animals to be offered
during the day were next presented at the door of the
Tabernacle; and lots were cast as to which of the two
bullocks was to be for himself, and which of the two goats
was to be slain. Then for the first time he entered the
most holy place amid the fumes of fragrant incense, and
sprinkled the blood of the bullock to make an atonement
for the sins of himself and his house. A second time he
entered with the blood of the goat, to make an atonement
for the sins of the people, who, meanwhile, stood without
in penitential grief. And when all was over, the nation's
sins were confessed over the head of the living goat,
which was sent into the land of forgetfulness. Still, no
one could suppose that the slaying of the one goat or the
sending of the other into the wilderness actually expiated
the offense of the whole people. There was a remembrance
of sins made once a year; but not necessarily entire
remission for all who stood in that vast silent crowd. And
many must have turned away in doubt and misgiving. David
expressed their feeling when he sang the Fifty-first Psalm
beneath the impression of his own sinnership (see also
Micah vi. 6).
But how different is all this now! Our
consciences are purged (ver. 14). We have no more
conscience of sins. We feel that the death of our Lord
Jesus is an adequate expiation for them all, and that he
has so fully taken them from us and put them away that
they cannot be found; they are as though they had never
been; they have ceased from the very memory of God. True,
there are works which are constantly rendering our
conscience unclean, as of old the flesh of the Israelite
was rendered unclean by the touch of death. But the blood
of Jesus does for our conscience what the ashes of the
heifer did for the flesh of the ceremonially unclean.
"The blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from
all sin." We have therefore no longer an evil
conscience resulting from unexpiated sin.
THE BLOOD OF ANIMALS IS CONTRASTED WITH
THE BLOOD OF CHRIST. Hecatombs of victims are not of equal
value with one man; how much less with the Son of God!
Rivers of the blood of beasts are not equivalent to one
drop of his. They offer no standard by which to apprise
his precious blood. This is too obvious to need further
comment here, and we shall need to defer to another
chapter our estimate, however inadequate, of the value of
that blood.
But in the meanwhile, let us notice
that it was through the Eternal Spirit that Christ offered
himself without spot to God. It was not, as some falsely
affirm, that the Father forced an innocent man to suffer
for sins he had never done, or that our Saviour suffered
to appease the Father's wrath; but that the eternal nature
of God came out in the sacrifice of Calvary. "God was
in Christ, reconciling the world unto himself." When
God determined to save men, he did not delegate the work
to angels, nor did he permit a sinless man to sink beneath
the intolerable burden of a world's sin; but in the person
of his Son, he took home to himself the agony and curse
and cost of sin, and by bearing them, wiped them out
forever. It is, therefore, eternal redemption (ver. I 2).
The death of the cross was a voluntary
act; "he offered himself; " Priest and victim
both. And it was an act in which the Eternal Trinity
participated; the manifestation in time of an eternal fact
of the divine nature.
And how can we ever show our gratitude,
except by serving the living God (ver. 14). We are
redeemed to serve; bought to be owned absolutely. Who can
refuse a service so reasonable, fraught with blessedness
so transcendent? Head! think for him whose brow was
thorn-girt. Hands! toil for him whose hands were nailed to
the cross. Feet! speed to do his behests whose feet were
pierced. Body of mine! be his temple whose body was wrung
with pains unspeakable. To serve him-this is the Only true
attitude and behavior, as those who are not their own, but
his.
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