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THE EPISTLE OF
PAUL THE APOSTLE TO THE
HEBREWS
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
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CHAPTER 1
@Heb
1:1-14. THE HIGHEST OF ALL REVELATIONS IS GIVEN US NOW
IN THE SON OF GOD, WHO IS GREATER THAN THE ANGELS, AND WHO,
HAVING COMPLETED REDEMPTION, SITS ENTHRONED AT GOD'S RIGHT
HAND.
The writer, though not inscribing his name, was well known
to those addressed (@Heb
13:19). For proofs of Paul being the author, see my Introduction.
In the Pauline method, the statement of subject and the
division are put before the discussion; and at the close,
the practical follows the doctrinal portion. The ardor of
Spirit in this Epistle, as in First John, bursting forth at
once into the subject (without prefatory inscription of name
and greeting), the more effectively strikes the hearers. The
date must have been while the temple was yet standing,
before its destruction, A.D. 70; some time before the
martyrdom of Peter, who mentions this Epistle of Paul (@2Pe
3:15,16); at a time when many of the first hearers
of the Lord were dead.
1. at sundry times--Greek, "in many
portions." All was not revealed to each one prophet;
but one received one portion of revelation, and another
another. To Noah the quarter of the world to which Messiah
should belong was revealed; to Abraham, the nation; to
Jacob, the tribe; to David and Isaiah, the family; to Micah,
the town of nativity; to Daniel, the exact time; to Malachi,
the coming of His forerunner, and His second advent; through
Jonah, His burial and resurrection; through Isaiah and
Hosea, His resurrection. Each only knew in part; but when
that which was perfect came in Messiah, that which was in
part was done away (@1Co
13:12).
in divers manners--for
example, internal suggestions, audible voices, the Urim and
Thummim, dreams, and visions. "In one way He was seen
by Abraham, in another by Moses, in another by Elias, and in
another by Micah; Isaiah, Daniel, and Ezekiel, beheld
different forms" [THEODORET]. (Compare @Nu
12:6-8). The Old Testament revelations were fragmentary
in substance, and manifold in form; the very multitude
of prophets shows that they prophesied only in part.
In Christ, the revelation of God is full, not in shifting
hues of separated color, but Himself the pure light, uniting
in His one person the whole spectrum (@Heb
1:3).
spake--the expression
usual for a Jew to employ in addressing Jews. So Matthew, a
Jew writing especially for Jews, quotes Scripture, not by
the formula, "It is written," but
"said," &c.
in time past--From
Malachi, the last of the Old Testament prophets, for four
hundred years, there had arisen no prophet, in order that
the Son might be the more an object of expectation [BENGEL].
As God (the Father) is introduced as having spoken
here; so God the Son, @Heb
2:3; God the Holy Ghost, @Heb
3:7.
the fathers--the
Jewish fathers. The Jews of former days (@1Co
10:1).
by--Greek,
"in." A mortal king speaks by his
ambassador, not (as the King of kings) in his
ambassador. The Son is the last and highest manifestation of
God (@Mt
21:34,37); not merely a measure, as in the prophets, but
the fulness of the Spirit of God dwelling in Him bodily (@Joh
1:16 3:34 Col 2:9). Thus he answers the Jewish objection
drawn from their prophets. Jesus is the end of all prophecy
(@Re
19:10), and of the law of Moses (@Joh
1:17 5:46).
2. in these last days--In the oldest manuscripts the Greek
is. "At the last part of these days." The Rabbins
divided the whole of time into "this age," or
"world," and "the age to come" (@Heb
2:5 6:5). The days of Messiah were the transition period
or "last part of these days" (in contrast to
"in times past"), the close of the existing
dispensation, and beginning of the final dispensation of
which Christ's second coming shall be the crowning
consummation.
by his Son--Greek,
"IN (His) Son" (@Joh
14:10). The true "Prophet" of God. "His
majesty is set forth: (1) Absolutely by the very name
"Son," and by three glorious predicates,
"whom He hath appointed," "by whom He made
the worlds," "who sat down on the right hand of
the Majesty on high;" thus His course is described from
the beginning of all things till he reached the goal (@Heb
1:2,3). (2) Relatively, in comparison with the
angels, @Heb
1:4; the confirmation of this follows, and the
very name "Son" is proved at @Heb
1:5; the "heirship," @Heb
1:6-9; the "making the worlds," @Heb
1:10-12; the "sitting at the right hand" of
God, @Heb
1:13,14." His being made heir follows His sonship,
and preceded His making the worlds (@Pr
8:22,23 Eph 3:11). As the first begotten, He is
heir of the universe (@Heb
1:6), which He made instrumentally, @Heb
11:3, where "by the Word of God" answers to
"by whom"' (the Son of God) here (@Joh
1:3). Christ was "appointed" (in God's eternal
counsel) to creation as an office; and the universe so
created was assigned to Him as a kingdom. He is "heir
of all things" by right of creation, and especially by
right of redemption. The promise to Abraham that he should
be heir of the world had its fulfilment, and will have it
still more fully, in Christ (@Ro
4:13 Ga 3:16 4:7).
worlds--the inferior
and the superior worlds (@Col
1:16). Literally, "ages" with all things and
persons belonging to them; the universe, including all space
and ages of time, and all material and spiritual existences.
The Greek implies, He not only appointed His Son heir
of all things before creation, but He also (better
than "also He") made by Him the worlds.
3. Who being--by pre-existent and essential being.
brightness of his glory--Greek,
the effulgence of His glory. "Light of (from)
light" [Nicene Creed]. "Who is so senseless
as to doubt concerning the eternal being of the Son? For
when has one seen light without effulgence?" [ATHANASIUS,
Against Arius, Orations, 2]. "The sun is never
seen without effulgence, nor the Father without the
Son" [THEOPHYLACT]. It is because He is the
brightness, &c., and because He upholds, &c.,
that He sat down on the right hand, &c. It was a
return to His divine glory (@Joh
6:62 17:5; compare Wisdom 7:25,26, where similar things
are said of wisdom).
express image--"impress."
But veiled in the flesh.
|
The Sun of God in
glory beams
Too bright for us to scan;
But we can face the light that streams
For the mild Son of man. (@2Co
3:18) |
of his person--Greek,
"of His substantial essence"; "hypostasis."
upholding all things--Greek,
"the universe." Compare @Col
1:15,17,20, which enumerates the three facts in the same
order as here.
by the word--Therefore
the Son of God is a Person; for He has the word [BENGEL]. His
word is God's word (@Heb
11:3).
of his power--"The
word" is the utterance which comes from His (the Son's)
power, and gives expression to it.
by himself--omitted in
the oldest manuscripts.
purged--Greek,
"made purification of . . .
sins," namely, in His atonement, which graciously
covers the guilt of sin. "Our" is omitted in the
oldest manuscripts. Sin was the great uncleanness in
God's sight, of which He has effected the purgation by His
sacrifice [ALFORD]. Our nature, as guilt-laden, could not,
without our great High Priest's blood of atonement
sprinkling the heavenly mercy seat, come into immediate
contact with God. EBRARD says, "The mediation between
man and God, who was present in the Most Holy Place, was
revealed in three forms: (1) In sacrifices (typical
propitiations for guilt); (2) In the priesthood (the agents
of those sacrifices); (3) In the Levitical laws of purity (Levitical
purity being attained by sacrifice positively, by avoidance
of Levitical pollution negatively, the people being thus
enabled to come into the presence of God without dying, @De
5:26)" (@Le
16:1-34).
sat down on the right hand
of the Majesty on high--fulfilling @Ps
110:1. This sitting of the Son at God's fight hand was
by the act of the Father (@Heb
8:1 Eph 1:20); it is never used of His pre-existing
state co-equal with the Father, but always of His exalted
state as Son of man after His sufferings, and as Mediator
for man in the presence of God (@Ro
8:34): a relation towards God and us about to come to an
end when its object has been accomplished (@1Co
15:28).
4. Being made . . . better--by His
exaltation by the Father (@Heb
1:3,13):in contrast to His being "made lower than
the angels" (@Heb
2:9). "Better," that is, superior to.
As "being" (@Heb
1:3) expresses His essential being so "being
made" (@Heb
7:26) marks what He became in His assumed manhood (@Php
2:6-9). Paul shows that His humbled form (at which the
Jews might stumble) is no objection to His divine
Messiahship. As the law was given by the ministration of
angels and Moses, it was inferior to the Gospel given by the
divine Son, who both is (@Heb
1:4-14) as God, and has been made, as the exalted Son of
man (@Heb
2:5-18), much better than the angels. The manifestations
of God by angels (and even by the angel of the covenant) at
different times in the Old Testament, did not bring man and
God into personal union, as the manifestation of God in
human flesh does.
by inheritance obtained--He
always had the thing itself, namely, Sonship;
but He "obtained by inheritance," according
to the promise of the Father, the name
"Son," whereby He is made known to men and angels.
He is "the Son of God" is a sense far exalted
above that in which angels are called "sons of
God" (@Job
1:6 38:7). "The fulness of the glory of the
peculiar name "the Son of God," is unattainable by
human speech or thought. All appellations are but fragments
of its glory beams united in it as in a central sun, @Re
19:12. A name that no than knew but He Himself."
5. For--substantiating His having "obtained a
more excellent name than the angels."
unto which--A frequent
argument in this Epistle is derived from the silence of
Scripture (@Heb
1:13 Heb 2:16 7:3,14) [BENGEL].
this day have I begotten
thee--(@Ps
2:7). Fulfilled at the resurrection of Jesus, whereby
the Father "declared," that is, made manifest His
divine Sonship, heretofore veiled by His humiliation (@Ac
13:33 Ro 1:4). Christ has a fourfold right to the title
"Son of God"; (1) By generation, as
begotten of God; (2) By commission, as sent by God;
(3) By resurrection, as "the first-begotten of
the dead" (compare @Lu
20:36 Ro 1:4 Re 1:5); (4) By actual possession,
as heir of all [BISHOP PEARSON]. The Psalm here quoted
applied primarily in a less full sense to Solomon, of whom
God promised by Nathan to David. "I will be his father
and he shall be my son." But as the whole theocracy was
of Messianic import, the triumph of David over Hadadezer and
neighboring kings (@2Sa
8:1-18 Ps 2:2,3,9-12) is a type of God's ultimately
subduing all enemies under His Son. whom He sets (Hebrew,
"anointed," @Ps
2:6) on His "holy hill of Zion," as King of
the Jews and of the whole earth. the antitype to Solomon,
son of David. The "I" in Greek is emphatic;
I the Everlasting Father have begotten Thee this day,
that is, on this day, the day of Thy being manifested as My
Son, "the first-begotten of the dead" (@Col
1:18 Re 1:5). when Thou hast ransomed and opened heaven
to Thy people. He had been always Son, but now first was
manifested as such in His once humbled, now exalted manhood
united to His Godhead. ALFORD refers "this day" to
the eternal generation of the Son: the day in which
the Son was begotten by the Father is an everlasting to-day:
there never was a yesterday or past time to Him, nor a
to-morrow or future time: "Nothing there is to come,
and nothing past, but an eternal NOW doth ever last" (@Pr
30:4 Joh 10:30,38 16:28 17:8). The communication of the
divine essence in its fulness, involves eternal generation;
for the divine essence has no beginning. But the context
refers to a definite point of time, namely, that of His
having entered on the inheritance (@Heb
1:4). The "bringing the first-begotten into the
world" (@Heb
1:6), is not subsequent, as ALFORD thinks, to @Heb
1:5, but anterior to it (compare @Ac
2:30-35).
6. And--Greek, "But." Not only this
proves His superiority, BUT a more decisive proof is @Ps
97:7, which shows that not only at His resurrection, but
also in prospect of His being brought into the world
(compare @Heb
9:11 10:5) as man, in His incarnation, nativity (@Lu
2:9-14), temptation (@Mt
4:10,11), resurrection (@Mt
28:2), and future second advent in glory. angels were
designed by God to be subject to Him. Compare @1Ti
3:16, "seen of angels"; God manifesting
Messiah as one to be gazed at with adoring love by heavenly
intelligences (@Eph
3:10 2Th 1:9,10 1Pe 3:22). The fullest realization of
His Lordship shall be at His second coming (@Ps
97:7 1Co 15:24,25 Php 2:9). "Worship Him all ye
gods" ("gods," that is, exalted beings,
as angels), refers to God; but it was
universally admitted among the Hebrews that God would dwell,
in a peculiar sense, in Messiah (so as to be in the Talmud
phrase, "capable of being pointed to with the
finger"); and so what was said of God was true of, and
to be fulfilled in, Messiah. KIMCHI says that the
ninety-third through the hundred first Psalms contain in
them the mystery of Messiah. God ruled the theocracy in and
through Him.
the world--subject to
Christ (@Heb
2:5). As "the first-begotten" He has the
rights of primogeniture (@Ro
8:29); @Col
1:15,16,18). In @De
32:43, the Septuagint has, "Let all the
angels of God worship Him," words not now found in the Hebrew.
This passage of the Septuagint may have been in
Paul's mind as to the form, but the substance
is taken from @Ps
97:7. The type David, in the @Ps
89:27 (quoted in @Heb
1:5), is called "God's first-born, higher
than the kings of the earth"; so the antitypical
first-begotten, the son of David, is to be worshipped by all
inferior lords, such as angels
("gods," @Ps
97:7); for He is "King of kings and Lord of
lords" (@Re
19:16). In the Greek, "again" is
transposed; but this does not oblige us, as ALFORD thinks,
to translate, "when He again shall have introduced,"
&c. namely, at Christ's second coming; for there is no
previous mention of a first bringing in; and
"again" is often used in quotations, not to be
joined with the verb, but parenthetically ("that I may
again quote Scripture"). English Version is
correct (compare @Mt
5:33; Greek, @Joh
12:39).
7. of--The Greek is rather, "In reference
TO the angels."
spirits--or
"winds": Who employeth His angels as the winds,
His ministers as the lightnings; or, He maketh His angelic
ministers the directing powers of winds and flames, when
these latter are required to perform His will.
"Commissions them to assume the agency or form of
flames for His purposes" [ALFORD]. English Version,
"maketh His angels spirits," means, He
maketh them of a subtle, incorporeal nature, swift as the
wind. So @Ps
18:10, "a cherub . . . the wings
of the wind." @Heb
1:14, "ministering spirits," favors English
Version here. As "spirits" implies the
wind-like velocity and subtle nature of the cherubim,
so "flame of fire" expresses the burning devotion
and intense all-consuming zeal of the adoring seraphim
(meaning "burning), @Isa
6:1. The translation, "maketh winds His messengers,
and a flame of fire His ministers (!)," is
plainly wrong. In the @Ps
104:3,4, the subject in each clause comes first, and the
attribute predicated of it second; so the Greek
article here marks "angels" and
"ministers" as the subjects, and
"winds" and "flame of fire," predicates,
Schemoth Rabba says, "God is called God of Zebaoth
(the heavenly hosts), because He does what He pleases with
His angels. When He pleases, He makes them to sit (@Jud
6:11); at other times to stand (@Isa
6:2); at times to resemble women (@Zec
5:9); at other times to resemble men (@Ge
18:2); at times He makes them 'spirits'; at times,
fire." "Maketh" implies that, however
exalted, they are but creatures, whereas the Son is the
Creator (@Heb
1:10):not begotten from everlasting, nor to be worshipped,
as the Son (@Re
14:7 22:8,9).
8. O God--the Greek has the article to mark
emphasis (@Ps
45:6,7).
for ever . . .
righteousness--Everlasting duration and righteousness
go together (@Ps
45:2 89:14).
a sceptre of righteousness--literally,
"a rod of rectitude," or
"straightforwardness." The oldest manuscripts
prefix "and" (compare @Es
4:11).
9. iniquity--"unnrighteousness." Some
oldest manuscripts read, "lawlessness."
therefore--because God
loves righteousness and hates iniquity.
God . . . thy
God--JEROME, AUGUSTINE, and others translate @Ps
45:7, "O God, Thy God, hath anointed thee,"
whereby Christ is addressed as God. This is probably the
true translation of the Hebrew there, and also of the
Greek of Hebrews here; for it is likely the Son is
addressed, "O God," as in @Heb
1:8. The anointing here meant is not that at His
baptism, when He solemnly entered on His ministry for us;
but that with the "oil of gladness," or
"exulting joy" (which denotes a triumph,
and follows as the consequence of His manifested love of
righteousness and hatred of iniquity), wherewith,
after His triumphant completion of His work, He has been
anointed by the Father above His fellows (not only above us,
His fellow men, the adopted members of God's family. whom
"He is not ashamed to call His brethren," but
above the angels, fellow partakers in part with Him, though
infinitely His inferiors, in the glories, holiness, and joys
of heaven; "sons of God," and angel
"messengers," though subordinate to the divine
Angel--"Messenger of the covenant"). Thus He is
antitype to Solomon, "chosen of all David's many sons
to sit upon the throne of the kingdom of the Lord over
Israel," even as His father David was chosen before all
the house of his father's sons. The image is drawn from the
custom of anointing guests at feasts (@Ps
23:5); or rather of anointing kings: not until His
ascension did He assume the kingdom as Son of man. A
fuller accomplishment is yet to be, when He shall be VISIBLY
the anointed King over the whole earth (set by the Father)
on His holy hill of Zion, @Ps
2:6,8. So David, His type, was first anointed at
Bethlehem (@1Sa
16:13 Ps 89:20); and yet again at Hebron, first over
Judah (@2Sa
2:4), then over all Israel (@2Sa
5:3); not till the death of Saul did he enter on his
actual kingdom; as it was not till after Christ's death that
the Father set Him at His right hand far above all
principalities (@Eph
1:20,21). The forty-fifth Psalm in its first meaning was
addressed to Solomon; but the Holy Spirit inspired the
writer to use language which in its fulness can only apply
to the antitypical Solomon, the true Royal Head of the
theocracy.
10. And--In another passage (@Ps
102:25-27) He says.
in the beginning--English
Version, @Ps
102:25, "of old": Hebrew,
"before," "aforetime." The Septuagint,
"in the beginning" (as in @Ge
1:1) answers by contrast to the end implied in
"They shall perish," &c. The Greek
order here (not in the Septuagint) is, "Thou in
the beginning, O Lord," which throws the
"Lord" into emphasis. "Christ is preached
even in passages where many might contend that the Father
was principally intended" [BENGEL].
laid the foundation of--"firmly
founded" is included in the idea of the Greek.
heavens--plural: not
merely one, but manifold, and including various orders of
heavenly intelligences (@Eph
4:10).
works of thine hands--the
heavens, as a woven veil or curtain spread out.
11. They--The earth and the heavens in their present
state and form "shall perish" (@Heb
12:26,27 2Pe 3:13). "Perish" does not mean annihilation;
just as it did not mean so in the case of "the world
that being overflowed with water, perished"
under Noah (@2Pe
3:6). The covenant of the possession of the earth was
renewed with Noah and his seed on the renovated earth. So it
shall be after the perishing by fire (@2Pe
3:12,13).
remainest--through
(so the Greek) all changes.
as . . . a
garment--(@Isa
51:6).
12. vesture--Greek, "an enwrapping
cloak."
fold them up--So the Septuagint,
@Ps
102:26; but the Hebrew, "change
them." The Spirit, by Paul, treats the Hebrew of
the Old Testament, with independence of handling, presenting
the divine truth in various aspects; sometimes as here
sanctioning the Septuagint (compare @Isa
34:4 Re 6:14); sometimes the Hebrew; sometimes
varying from both.
changed--as one lays
aside a garment to put on another.
thou art the same--(@Isa
46:4 Mal 3:6). The same in nature, therefore in covenant
faithfulness to Thy people.
shall not fail--Hebrew,
"shall not end." Israel, in the Babylonian
captivity, in the hundred second Psalm, casts her hopes of
deliverance on Messiah, the unchanging covenant God of
Israel.
13. Quotation from @Ps
110:1. The image is taken from the custom of conquerors
putting the feet on the necks of the conquered (@Jos
10:24,25).
14. ministering spirits--referring to @Heb
1:7, "spirits . . . ministers." They
are incorporeal spirits, as God is, but ministering
to Him as inferiors.
sent forth--present
participle: "being sent forth" continually,
as their regular service in all ages.
to minister--Greek,
"unto (that is, 'for') ministry."
for them--Greek,
"on account of the." Angels are sent forth
on ministrations to God and Christ, not primarily to
men, though for the good of "those who are about
to inherit salvation" (so the Greek): the elect,
who believe, or shall believe, for whom all things, angels
included, work together for good (@Ro
8:28). Angels' ministrations are not properly rendered
to men, since the latter have no power of commanding them,
though their ministrations to God are often directed to the
good of men. So the superiority of the Son of God to angels
is shown. They "all," how ever various their
ranks, "minister"; He is ministered to. They
"stand" (@Lu
1:19) before God, or are "sent forth"
to execute the divine commands on behalf of them whom He
pleases to save; He "sits on the right hand of
the Majesty on high" (@Heb
1:3,13). He rules; they serve.
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