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THE EPISTLE OF
PAUL THE APOSTLE TO THE
HEBREWS
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
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CHAPTER 10
@Heb
10:1-39. CONCLUSION OF THE
FOREGOING ARGUMENT.
THE YEARLY
RECURRING LAW
SACRIFICES CANNOT
PERFECT THE WORSHIPPER,
BUT CHRIST'S
ONCE-FOR-ALL
OFFERING CAN.
Instead of the daily ministry of
the Levitical priests, Christ's service is perfected by
the one sacrifice, whence He now sits on the right hand of
God as a Priest-King, until all His foes shall be subdued
unto Him. Thus the new covenant (@Heb
8:8-12) is inaugurated, whereby the law is written on
the heart, so that an offering for sin is needed no more.
Wherefore we ought to draw near the Holiest in firm faith
and love; fearful of the awful results of apostasy;
looking for the recompense to be given at Christ's coming.
1. Previously the
oneness of Christ's offering was shown; now is shown
its perfection as contrasted with the law sacrifices.
having--inasmuch as it has but "the shadow,
not the very image," that is, not the exact likeness,
reality, and full revelation, such as the Gospel has. The
"image" here means the archetype (compare @Heb
9:24), the original, solid image [BENGEL]
realizing to us those heavenly verities, of which the law
furnished but a shadowy outline before. Compare @2Co
3:13,14,18; the Gospel is the very setting forth by
the Word and Spirit of the heavenly realities themselves,
out of which it (the Gospel) is constructed. So ALFORD.
As Christ is "the express image (Greek,
'impress') of the Father's person" (@Heb
1:3), so the Gospel is the heavenly verities
themselves manifested by revelation--the heavenly
very archetype, of which the law was drawn as a
sketch, or outline copy (@Heb
8:5). The law was a continual process of acted
prophecy, proving the divine design that its counterparts
should come; and proving the truth of those counterparts
when they came. Thus the imperfect and continued expiatory
sacrifices before Christ foretend, and now prove, the
reality of, Christ's one perfect antitypical expiation.
good things to come--(@Heb
9:11); belonging to "the world (age) to come." Good
things in part made present by faith to the believer,
and to be fully realized hereafter in actual and perfect
enjoyment. Lessing says, "As Christ's Church on earth is a
prediction of the economy of the future life, so the Old
Testament economy is a prediction of the Christian
Church." In relation to the temporal good things of the
law, the spiritual and eternal good things of the Gospel
are "good things to come." @Col
2:17 calls legal ordinances "the shadow," and Christ
"the body."
never--at any time (@Heb
10:11).
with those sacrifices--rather, "with the
same sacrifices.
year by year--This clause in the Greek
refers to the whole sentence, not merely to the words
"which they the priests offered" (Greek, "offer").
Thus the sense is, not as English Version, but,
the law year by year, by the repetition of the same
sacrifices, testifies its inability to perfect the
worshippers; namely, on the
YEARLY day of atonement. The
"daily" sacrifices are referred to, @Heb
10:11.
continually--Greek, "continuously,"
implying that they offer a toilsome and ineffectual "continuous"
round of the "same" atonement-sacrifices
recurring "year by year."
comers thereunto--those so coming unto
God, namely, the worshippers (the whole people) coming to
God in the person of their representative, the high
priest.
perfect--fully meet man's needs as to
justification and sanctification (see on Heb 9:9).
2. For--if the law could,
by its sacrifices, have perfected the worshippers.
they--the sacrifices.
once purged--IF
they were once for all cleansed (@Heb
7:27).
conscience--"consciousness of sin" (@Heb
9:9).
3. But--so far from
those sacrifices ceasing to be offered (@Heb
10:2).
in, &c.--in the fact of their being offered,
and in the course of their being offered on the day of
atonement. Contrast @Heb
10:17.
a remembrance--a recalling to mind by the
high priest's confession, on the day of atonement, of the
sins both of each past year and of all former years,
proving that the expiatory sacrifices of former years were
not felt by men's consciences to have fully atoned for
former sins; in fact, the expiation and remission were
only legal and typical (@Heb
10:4,11). The Gospel remission, on the contrary, is so
complete, that sins are "remembered no more" (@Heb
10:17) by God. It is unbelief to "forget" this
once-for-all purgation, and to fear on account of "former
sins" (@2Pe
1:9). The believer, once for all bathed, needs
only to "wash" his hands and "feet" of soils, according as
he daily contracts them, in Christ's blood (@Joh
13:10).
4. For, &c.--reason why,
necessarily, there is a continually recurring "remembrance
of sins" in the legal sacrifices (@Heb
10:3). Typically, "the blood of bulls," &c.,
sacrificed, had power; but it was only in virtue of the
power of the one real antitypical sacrifice of Christ;
they had no power in themselves; they were not the
instrument of perfect vicarious atonement, but an
exhibition of the need of it, suggesting to the faithful
Israelite the sure hope of coming redemption, according to
God's promise.
take away--"take off." The Greek,
@Heb
10:11, is stronger, explaining the weaker word here,
"take away utterly." The blood of beasts could not
take away the sin of man. A
MAN must do that (see on Heb
9:12-14).
5. Christ's voluntary self
offering, in contrast to those inefficient sacrifices, is
shown to fulfill perfectly "the will of God" as to our
redemption, by completely atoning "for (our) sins."
Wherefore--seeing that a nobler than animal
sacrifices was needed to "take away sins."
when he cometh--Greek, "coming." The
time referred to is the period before His entrance
into the world, when the inefficiency of animal sacrifices
for expiation had been proved [THOLUCK].
Or, the time is that between Jesus' first dawning of
reason as a child, and the beginning of His public
ministry, during which, being ripened in human resolution,
He was intently devoting Himself to the doing of His
Father's will [ALFORD].
But the time of "coming" is present; not "when He
had come," but "when coming into the world"; so, in
order to accord with ALFORD'S
view, "the world" must mean His
PUBLIC ministry: when coming, or
about to come, into public. The Greek verbs
are in the past: "sacrifice . . . Thou didst not
wish, but a body Thou didst prepare for Me"; and,
"Lo, I am come." Therefore, in order to harmonize
these times, the present coming, or about to come,
with the past, "A body Thou didst prepare for Me,"
we must either explain as ALFORD,
or else, if we take the period to be before His
actual arrival in the world (the earth) or incarnation,
we must explain the past tenses to refer to God's
purpose, which speaks of what He designed from
eternity as though it were already fulfilled. "A body Thou
didst prepare in Thy eternal counsel." This seems to me
more likely than explaining "coming into the world," "coming
into public," or entering on His public ministry.
David, in the fortieth Psalm (here quoted), reviews his
past troubles and God's having delivered him from them,
and his consequent desire to render willing obedience to
God as more acceptable than sacrifices; but the Spirit
puts into his mouth language finding its partial
application to David, and its full realization only in the
divine Son of David. "The more any son of man approaches
the incarnate Son of God in position, or office, or
individual spiritual experience, the more directly may his
holy breathings in the power of Christ's Spirit be taken
as utterances of Christ Himself. Of all men, the
prophet-king of Israel resembled and foreshadowed Him the
most" [ALFORD].
a body hast thou prepared me--Greek,
"Thou didst fit for Me a body." "In Thy counsels
Thou didst determine to make for Me a body, to be
given up to death as a sacrificial victim" [WAHL].
In the Hebrew, @Ps
40:6, it is "mine ears hast thou opened," or "dug."
Perhaps this alludes to the custom of boring the ear of
a slave who volunteers to remain under his master when he
might be free. Christ's assuming a human body,
in obedience to the Father's will, in order to die the
death of a slave (@Heb
2:14), was virtually the same act of voluntary
submission to service as that of a slave suffering his ear
to be bored by his master. His willing obedience to the
Father's will is what is dwelt on as giving especial
virtue to His sacrifice (@Heb
10:7,9,10). The preparing, or fitting of a
body for Him, is not with a view to His mere
incarnation, but to His expiatory sacrifice (@Heb
10:10), as the contrast to "sacrifice and
offering" requires; compare also @Ro
7:4 Eph 2:16 Col 1:22. More probably "opened mine
ears" means opened mine inward ear, so as to be
attentively obedient to what God wills me to do, namely,
to assume the body He has prepared for me for my
sacrifice, so @Job
33:16, Margin; @Job
36:10 (doubtless the boring of a slave's "ear" was the
symbol of such willing obedience); @Isa
50:5, The Lord God hath opened mine ear," that is,
made me obediently attentive as a slave to his
master. Others somewhat similarly explain, "Mine ears hast
thou digged," or "fashioned," not with allusion to
@Ex
21:6, but to the true office of the ear--a willing,
submissive attention to the voice of God (@Isa
50:4,5). The forming of the ear implies the
preparation of the body, that is, the incarnation; this
secondary idea, really in the Hebrew, though less
prominent, is the one which Paul uses for his argument. In
either explanation the idea of Christ taking on Him the
form, and becoming obedient as a servant, is
implied. As He assumed a body in which to make His
self-sacrifice, so ought we present our bodies a
living sacrifice (@Ro
12:1).
6. burnt offerings--Greek,
"whole burnt offerings."
thou hast had no pleasure--as if these could
in themselves atone for sin: God had pleasure in (Greek,
"approved," or "was well pleased with") them, in so
far as they were an act of obedience to His positive
command under the Old Testament, but not as having an
intrinsic efficacy such as Christ's sacrifice had.
Contrast @Mt
3:17.
7. I come--rather, "I am
come" (see on Heb 10:5). "Here we have the creed, as it
were, of Jesus: 'I am come to fulfil the law,' @Mt
5:17; to preach, @Mr
1:38; to call sinners to repentance, @Lu
5:32; to send a sword and to set men at variance, @Mt
10:34,35; I came down from heaven to do the will of
Him that sent me, @Joh
6:38,39 (so here, @Ps
40:7,8); I am sent to the lost sheep of the house of
Israel, @Mt
15:24; I am come into this world for judgment, @Joh
9:39; I am come that they might have life, and might
have it more abundantly, @Joh
10:10; to save what had been lost, @Mt
18:11; to seek and to save that which was lost, @Lu
19:10; compare @1Ti
1:15; to save men's lives, @Lu
9:56; to send fire on the earth, @Lu
12:49; to minister, @Mt
20:28; as "the Light," @Joh
12:46; to bear witness unto the truth, @Joh
18:37. See, reader, that thy Saviour obtain what He
aimed at in thy case. Moreover, do thou for thy part say,
why thou art come here? Dost thou, then, also, do the will
of God? From what time? and in what way?" [BENGEL].
When the two goats on the day of atonement were presented
before the Lord, that goat on which the lot of the Lord
should fall was to be offered as a sin offering; and that
lot was lifted up on high in the hand of the high priest,
and then laid upon the head of the goat which was to die;
so the hand of God determined all that was
done to Christ. Besides the covenant of God with man
through Christ's blood, there was another covenant made by
the Father with the Son from eternity. The condition was,
"If He shall make His soul an offering for sin, He shall
see His seed," &c. (@Isa
53:10). The Son accepted the condition, "Lo, I come to
do Thy will, O God" [BISHOP
PEARSON].
Oblation, intercession, and benediction, are His three
priestly offices.
in the volume, &c.--literally, "the roll":
the parchment manuscript being wrapped around a cylinder
headed with knobs. Here, the Scripture "volume" meant is
the fortieth Psalm. "By this very passage 'written of Me,'
I undertake to do Thy will [namely, that I should die for
the sins of the world, in order that all who believe may
be saved, not by animal sacrifices, @Heb
10:6, but by My death]." This is the written contract
of Messiah (compare @Ne
9:38), whereby He engaged to be our surety. So
complete is the inspiration of all that is written, so
great the authority of the Psalms, that what David says is
really what Christ then and there said.
8. he--Christ.
Sacrifice, &c.--The oldest manuscripts read,
"Sacrifices and offerings" (plural). This
verse combines the two clauses previously quoted
distinctly, @Heb
10:5,6, in contrast to the sacrifice of Christ with
which God was well pleased.
9. Then said he--"At that
time (namely, when speaking by David's mouth in the
fortieth Psalm) He hath said." The rejection of the legal
sacrifices involves, as its concomitant, the voluntary
offer of Jesus to make the self-sacrifice with which God
is well pleased (for, indeed, it was God's own "will" that
He came to do in offering it: so that this
sacrifice could not but be well pleasing to God).
I come--"I am come."
taketh away--"sets aside the first," namely,
"the legal system of sacrifices" which God wills not.
the second--"the will of God" (@Heb
10:7,9) that Christ should redeem us by His
self-sacrifice.
10. By--Greek, "In."
So "in," and "through," occur in the same sentence, @1Pe
1:22, "Ye have purified your souls in obeying
the truth through the Spirit." Also, @1Pe
1:5, in the Greek. The "in (fulfilment
of) which will" (compare the use of in, @Eph
1:6, "wherein [in which grace] He hath made us
accepted, in the Beloved"), expresses the originating
cause; "THROUGH
the offering . . . of Christ," the instrumental or
mediatory cause. The whole work of redemption flows
from "the will" of God the Father, as the First Cause, who
decreed redemption from before the foundation of the
world. The "will" here (boulema) is His absolute
sovereign will. His "good will" (eudokia) is a
particular aspect of it.
are sanctified--once for all, and as our
permanent state (so the Greek). It is the
finished work of Christ in having sanctified us (that is,
having translated us from a state of unholy alienation
into a state of consecration to God, having "no
more conscience of sin," @Heb
10:2) once for all and permanently, not the process of
gradual sanctification, which is here referred to.
the body--"prepared" for Him by the Father (@Heb
10:5). As the atonement, or reconciliation, is by the
blood of Christ (@Le
17:11), so our sanctification (consecration to
God, holiness and eternal bliss) is by the body of
Christ (@Col
1:22). ALFORD
quotes the Book of Common Prayer Communion Service,
"that our sinful bodies may be made clean by His body,
and our souls washed through His most precious blood."
once for all--(@Heb
7:27 9:12,26,28 10:12,14).
11. And--a new point of
contrast; the frequent repetition of the sacrifices.
priest--The oldest manuscripts read, "high
priest." Though he did not in person stand "daily"
offering sacrifices, he did so by the subordinate priests
of whom, as well as of all Israel, he was the
representative head. So "daily" is applied to the high
priests (@Heb
7:27).
standeth--the attitude of one ministering; in
contrast to "sat down on the right hand of God," @Heb
10:12, said of Christ; the posture of one being
ministered to as a king.
which--Greek, "the which," that is, of
such a kind as.
take away--utterly; literally, "strip off all
round." Legal sacrifices might, in part, produce
the sense of forgiveness, yet scarcely even that (see on
Heb 10:4); but entirely to strip off one's guilt
they never could.
12. this man--emphatic (@Heb
3:3).
for ever--joined in English Version
with "offered one sacrifice"; offered one sacrifice, the
efficacy of which endures for ever; literally.
"continuously," (compare @Heb
10:14). "The offering of Christ, once for all made,
will continue the one and only oblation for ever; no other
will supersede it" [BENGEL].
The mass, which professes to be the frequent repetition of
one and the same sacrifice of Christ's body, is hence
disproved. For not only is Christ's body one, but also
His offering is one, and that inseparable from His
suffering (@Heb
9:26). The mass would be much the same as the Jewish
sacrifices which Paul sets aside as abrogated, for they
were anticipations of the one sacrifice, just as Rome
makes masses continuations of it, in opposition to Paul's
argument. A repetition would imply that the former
once-for-all offering of the one sacrifice was imperfect,
and so would be dishonoring to it (@Heb
10:2,18). @Heb
10:14, on the contrary, says, "He hath
PERFECTED FOR EVER
them that are sanctified." If Christ offered Himself at
the last supper, then He offered Himself again on the
cross, and there would be two offerings; but Paul
says there was only one, once for all. Compare
Note, see on Heb 9:26. English Version is
favored by the usage in this Epistle, of putting the
Greek "for ever" after that which it qualifies. Also,
"one sacrifice for ever," stands in contrast to "the same
sacrifices oftentimes" (@Heb
10:11). Also, @1Co
15:25,28, agrees with @Heb
10:12,13, taken as English Version, not
joining, as ALFORD
does, "for ever" with "sat down," for Jesus is to give
up the mediatorial throne "when all things shall be
subdued unto Him," and not to sit on it
for ever.
13. expecting--"waiting."
Awaiting the execution of His Father's will, that
all His foes should be subjected to Him. The Son waits
till the Father shall "send Him forth to triumph over all
His foes." He is now sitting at rest (@Heb
10:12), invisibly reigning, and having His foes
virtually, by right of His death, subject to Him. His
present sitting on the unseen throne is a necessary
preliminary to His coming forth to subject His foes
openly. He shall then come forth to a visibly manifested
kingdom and conquest over His foes. Thus He fulfils @Ps
110:1. This agrees with @1Co
15:23-28. He is, by His Spirit and His providence, now
subjecting His foes to Him in part (@Ps
110:1-7). The subjection of His foes fully
shall be at His second advent, and from that time to the
general judgment (@Re
19:1-20:15); then comes the subjection of Himself as
Head of the Church to the Father (the mediatorial economy
ceasing when its end shall have been accomplished), that
God may be all in all. Eastern conquerors used to tread on
the necks of the vanquished, as Joshua did to the five
kings. So Christ's total and absolute conquest at His
coming is symbolized.
be made his footstool--literally, "be placed
(rendered) footstool of His feet."
his enemies--Satan and Death, whose strength
consists in "sin"; this being taken away (@Heb
10:12), the power of the foes is taken away, and their
destruction necessarily follows.
14. For--The sacrifice
being "for ever" in its efficacy (@Heb
10:12) needs no renewal.
them that are sanctified--rather as Greek,
"them that are being sanctified." The
sanctification (consecration to God) of the elect (@1Pe
1:2) believers is perfect in Christ once for all (see
on
Heb 10:10). (Contrast the law, @Heb
7:19 9:9 10:1). The development of that sanctification
is progressive.
15. The Greek, has
"moreover," or "now."
is a witness--of the truth which I am setting
forth. The Father's witness is given @Heb
5:10. The Son's, @Heb
10:5. Now is added that of the Holy Spirit, called
accordingly "the Spirit of grace," @Heb
10:29. The testimony of all Three leads to the same
conclusion (@Heb
10:18).
for after that he had said before--The
conclusion to the sentence is in @Heb
10:17, "After He had said before, This is the
covenant that I will make with them (with the house of
Israel, @Heb
8:10; here extended to the spiritual Israel) . . .
saith the Lord; I will put (literally, 'giving,' referring
to the giving of the law; not now as then,
giving into the hands, but giving) My laws into
their hearts ('mind,' @Heb
8:10) and in their minds ('hearts,' @Heb
8:10); I will inscribe (so the Greek)
them (here He omits the addition quoted in @Heb
8:10,11, I will be to them a God . . . and they
shall not teach every man his neighbor . . .), and
(that is, after He had said the foregoing, HE
THEN ADDS) their sins . . . will I
remember no more." The great object of the quotation here
is to prove that, there being in the Gospel covenant,
"REMISSION of
sins" (@Heb
10:17), there is no more need of a sacrifice for sins.
The object of the same quotation in @Heb
8:8-13 is to show that, there being a "NEW
covenant," the old is antiquated.
18. where remission of these is--as
there is under the Gospel covenant (@Heb
10:17). "Here ends the finale (@Heb
10:1-18) of the great tripartite arrangement (@Heb
7:1-25 7:26-9:12 9:13-10:18) of the middle portion of
the Epistle. Its great theme was Christ a High Priest for
ever after the order of Melchisedec. What it is to be a
high priest after the order of Melchisedec is set forth, @Heb
7:1-25, as contrasted with the Aaronic order. That
Christ, however, as High Priest, is Aaron's antitype in
the true holy place, by virtue of His self-sacrifice here
on earth, and Mediator of a better covenant, whose
essential character the old only typified, we learn, @Heb
7:26-9:12. And that Christ's self-sacrifice, offered
through the Eternal Spirit, is of everlasting power, as
contrasted with the unavailing cycle of legal offerings,
is established in the third part, @Heb
9:13-10:18; the first half of this last portion [@Heb
9:13-28], showing that both our present possession of
salvation, and our future completion of it, are as certain
to us as that He is with God, ruling as a Priest and
reigning as a King, once more to appear, no more as a
bearer of our sins, but in glory as a Judge. The second
half, @Heb
10:1-18, reiterating the main position of the whole,
the High Priesthood of Christ, grounded on His offering of
Himself--its kingly character its eternal accomplishment
of its end, confirmed by Psalms 40 and 110 and Jeremiah
31" [DELITZSCH
in ALFORD].
19. Here begins the third
and last division of the Epistle; our duty now while
waiting for the Lord's second advent. Resumption and
expansion of the exhortation (@Heb
4:14-16; compare @Heb
10:22,23 here) wherewith he closed the first part of
the Epistle, preparatory to his great doctrinal argument,
beginning at @Heb
7:1.
boldness--"free confidence," grounded on the
consciousness that our sins have been forgiven.
to enter--literally, "as regards the
entering."
by--Greek, "in"; it is in the
blood of Jesus that our boldness to enter is grounded.
Compare @Eph
3:12, "In whom we have boldness and access with
confidence." It is His having once for all entered as our
Forerunner (@Heb
6:20) and High Priest (@Heb
10:21), making atonement for us with His blood, which
is continually there (@Heb
12:24) before God, that gives us confident access. No
priestly caste now mediates between the sinner and his
Judge. We may come boldly with loving confidence,
not with slavish fear, directly through Christ, the only
mediating Priest. The minister is not officially nearer
God than the layman; nor can the latter serve God at a
distance or by deputy, as the natural man would like. Each
must come for himself, and all are accepted when they come
by the new and living way opened by Christ. Thus all
Christians are, in respect to access directly to God,
virtually high priests (@Re
1:6). They draw nigh in and through Christ, the only
proper High Priest (@Heb
7:25).
20. which, &c.--The
antecedent in the Greek is "the entering"; not as
English Version, "way." Translate, "which
(entering) He has consecrated (not as though it were
already existing, but has been the first to open,
INAUGURATED
as a new thing; see on Heb 9:18, where the Greek
is the same) for us (as) a new (Greek, 'recent'; recently
opened, @Ro
16:25,26) and living way" (not like the lifeless way
through the law offering of the blood of dead
victims, but real, vital, and of perpetual
efficacy, because the living and life-giving
Saviour is that way. It is a living hope
that we have, producing not dead, but living,
works). Christ, the first-fruits of our nature, has
ascended, and the rest is sanctified thereby. "Christ's
ascension is our promotion; and whither the glory of the
Head hath preceded, thither the hope of the body, too, is
called" [LEO].
the veil--As the veil had to be passed
through in order to enter the holiest place, so the
weak, human suffering flesh (@Heb
5:7) of Christ's humanity (which veiled His God head)
had to be passed through by Him in entering the heavenly
holiest place for us; in putting off His rent flesh,
the temple veil, its type, was simultaneously rent from
top to bottom (@Mt
27:51). Not His body, but His weak suffering
flesh, was the veil; His body was the temple (@Joh
2:19).
21. high priest--As a
different Greek term (archiereus) is used
always elsewhere in this Epistle for "high priest,"
translate as Greek here, "A Great Priest";
one who is at once King and "Priest on His throne" (@Zec
6:13); a royal Priest, and a priestly King.
house of God--the spiritual house, the
Church, made up of believers, whose home is heaven,
where Jesus now is (@Heb
12:22,23). Thus, by "the house of God," over which
Jesus is, heaven is included in meaning, as well as
the Church, whose home it is.
22. (@Heb
4:16 7:19.)
with a true heart--without hypocrisy; "in
truth, and with a perfect heart"; a heart thoroughly
imbued with "the truth" (@Heb
10:26).
full assurance--(@Heb
6:11); with no doubt as to our acceptance when coming
to God by the blood of Christ. As "faith" occurs here, so
"hope," and "love," @Heb
10:23,24.
sprinkled from--that is, sprinkled so as
to be cleansed from.
evil conscience--a consciousness of guilt
unatoned for, and uncleansed away (@Heb
10:2 Heb 9:9). Both the hearts and the
bodies are cleansed. The legal purifications were with
blood of animal victims and with water, and could only
cleanse the flesh (@Heb
9:13,21). Christ's blood purifies the heart and
conscience. The Aaronic priest, in entering the holy
place, washed with water (@Heb
9:19) in the brazen laver. Believers, as priests to
God, are once for all washed in BODY (as distinguished
from "hearts") at baptism. As we have an immaterial, and a
material nature, the cleansing of both is expressed by
"hearts" and "body," the inner and the outer man; so the
whole man, material and immaterial. The baptism of the
body, however, is not the mere putting away of material
filth, nor an act operating by intrinsic efficacy, but the
sacramental seal, applied to the outer man, of a spiritual
washing (@1Pe
3:21). "Body" (not merely "flesh," the carnal
part, as @2Co
7:1) includes the whole material man, which
needs cleansing, as being redeemed, as well as the soul.
The body, once polluted with sin, is washed, so as to be
fitted like Christ's holy body, and by His body, to be
spiritually a pure and living offering. On the "pure
water," the symbol of consecration and sanctification,
compare @Joh
19:34 1Co 6:11 1Jo 5:6 Eze 36:25. The perfects "having
. . . hearts sprinkled . . . body (the Greek
is singular) washed," imply a continuing state
produced by a once-for-all accomplished act, namely, our
justification by faith through Christ's blood, and
consecration to God, sealed sacramentally by the baptism
of our body.
23. (@Heb
3:6,14 4:14.)
profession--Greek, "confession."
our faith--rather as Greek, "our
hope"; which is indeed faith exercised as to the
future inheritance. Hope rests on faith, and at the
same time quickens faith, and is the ground of our
bold confession (@1Pe
3:15). Hope is similarly (@Heb
10:22) connected with purification (@1Jo
3:3).
without wavering--without declension (@Heb
3:14), "steadfast unto the end."
he--God is faithful to His promises (@Heb
6:17,18 11:11 12:26,28 1Co 1:9 10:13 1Th 5:24 2Th 3:3;
see also Christ's promise, @Joh
12:26); but man is too often unfaithful to his duties.
24. Here, as elsewhere,
hope and love follow faith; the Pauline
triad of Christian graces.
consider--with the mind attentively fixed on
"one another" (see on Heb 3:1), contemplating with
continual consideration the characters and wants of our
brethren, so as to render mutual help and counsel. Compare
"consider," @Ps
41:1, and @Heb
12:15, "(All) looking diligently lest any fail
of the grace of God."
to provoke--Greek, "with a view to
provoking unto love," instead of provoking to hatred,
as is too often the case.
25. assembling of ourselves
together--The Greek, "episunagoge," is
only found here and @2Th
2:1 (the gathering together of the elect to Christ at
His coming, @Mt
24:31). The assembling or gathering of ourselves for
Christian communion in private and public, is an earnest
of our being gathered together to Him at His appearing.
Union is strength; continual assemblings together beget
and foster love, and give good opportunities for
"provoking to good works," by "exhorting one another" (@Heb
3:13). IGNATIUS
says, "When ye frequently, and in numbers meet together,
the powers of Satan are overthrown, and his mischief is
neutralized by your likemindedness in the faith." To
neglect such assemblings together might end in apostasy at
last. He avoids the Greek term "sunagoge,"
as suggesting the Jewish synagogue meetings
(compare @Re
2:9).
as the manner of some is--"manner," that is,
habit, custom. This gentle expression proves he is not
here as yet speaking of apostasy.
the day approaching--This, the shortest
designation of the day of the Lord's coming, occurs
elsewhere only in @1Co
3:13; a confirmation of the Pauline authorship of this
Epistle. The Church being in all ages kept
uncertain how soon Christ is coming, the day is,
and has been, in each age, practically always near;
whence, believers have been called on always to be
watching for it as nigh at hand. The Hebrews were now
living close upon One of those great types and foretastes
of it, the destruction of Jerusalem (@Mt
24:1,2), "the bloody and fiery dawn of the great day;
that day is the day of days, the ending day of all days,
the settling day of all days, the day of the promotion of
time into eternity, the day which, for the Church, breaks
through and breaks off the night of the present world" [DELITZSCH
in ALFORD].
26. Compare on this and
following verses, @Heb
6:4, &c. There the warning was that if there be not
diligence in progressing, a falling off will take place,
and apostasy may ensue: here it is, that if there be
lukewarmness in Christian communion, apostasy may ensue.
if
we sin--Greek present participle: if
we be found sinning, that is, not isolated acts,
but a state of sin [ALFORD].
A violation not only of the law, but of the whole
economy of the New Testament (@Heb
10:28,29).
wilfully--presumptuously, Greek
"willingly." After receiving "full knowledge (so the
Greek, compare @1Ti
2:4) of the truth," by having been "enlightened," and
by having "tasted" a certain measure even of grace of "the
Holy Ghost" (the Spirit of truth, @Joh
14:17; and "the Spirit of grace," @Heb
10:29): to fall away (as "sin" here means, @Heb
3:12,17; compare @Heb
6:6) and apostatize (@Heb
3:12) to Judaism or infidelity, is not a sin of
ignorance, or error ("out of the way," the
result) of infirmity, but a deliberate sinning
against the Spirit (@Heb
10:29 Heb 5:2): such sinning, where a
consciousness of Gospel obligations not only was, but is
present: a sinning presumptuously and preseveringly
against Christ's redemption for us, and the Spirit
of grace in us. "He only who stands high can fall
low. A lively reference in the soul to what is good is
necessary in order to be thoroughly wicked; hence, man can
be more reprobate than the beasts, and the apostate angels
than apostate man" [THOLUCK].
remaineth no more sacrifice--For there is but
ONE Sacrifice
that can atone for sin; they, after having fully known
that sacrifice, deliberately reject it.
27. a certain--an
extraordinary and indescribable. The indefiniteness, as of
something peculiar of its kind, makes the
description the more terrible (compare Greek, @Jas
1:18).
looking for--"expectation": a later sense of
the Greek. ALFORD
strangely translates, as the Greek usually means
elsewhere, "reception." The transition is easy from
"giving a reception to" something or someone, to "looking
for." Contrast the "expecting" (the very same Greek
as here), @Heb
10:13, which refutes ALFORD.
fiery indignation--literally, "zeal of fire."
Fire is personified: glow or ardor of fire, that is, of
Him who is "a consuming fire."
devour--continually.
28. Compare @Heb
2:2,3 12:25.
despised--"set at naught" [ALFORD]:
utterly and heinously violated, not merely some minor
detail, but the whole law and covenant; for
example, by idolatry (@De
17:2-7). So here apostasy answers to such an
utter violation of the old covenant.
died--Greek, "dies": the normal
punishment of such transgression, then still in force.
without mercy--literally, "mercies": removal
out of the pale of mitigation, or a respite of his doom.
under--on the evidence of.
29. sorer--Greek,
"worse," namely, "punishment" (literally, "vengeance")
than any mere temporal punishment of the body.
suppose ye--an appeal to the Hebrews' reason
and conscience.
thought worthy--by God at the judgment.
trodden under foot the Son of God--by "wilful"
apostasy. So he treads under foot God Himself who
"glorified His Son as an high priest" (@Heb
5:5 6:6).
an unholy thing--literally, "common," as
opposed to "sanctified." No better than the blood of a
common man, thus involving the consequence that Christ, in
claiming to be God, was guilty of blasphemy. and so
deserved to die!
wherewith he was sanctified--for Christ died
even for him. "Sanctified," in the fullest sense, belongs
only to the saved elect. But in some sense it belongs also
to those who have gone a far way in Christian experience,
and yet fall away at last. The higher such a one's past
Christian experiences, the deeper his fall.
done despite unto--by repelling in fact:
as "blasphemy" is despite in words (@Mr
3:29). "Of the Jews who became Christians and relapsed
to Judaism, we find from the history of Uriel Acosta, that
they required a blasphemy against Christ. 'They applied to
Him epithets used against Molech the adulterous branch,'
&c." [THOLUCK].
the Spirit of grace--the Spirit that confers
grace. "He who does not accept the benefit, insults Him
who confers it. He hath made thee a son: wilt thou become
a slave? He has come to take up His abode with thee; but
thou art introducing evil into thyself" [CHRYSOSTOM].
"It is the curse of evil eternally to propagate evil: so,
for him who profanes the Christ without him, and
blasphemes the Christ within him, there is
subjectively no renewal of a change of mind (@Heb
6:6), and objectively no new sacrifice for sins"
(@Heb
10:26) [THOLUCK].
30. him--God, who enters no
empty threats.
Vengeance belongeth unto me--Greek,
"To Me belongeth vengeance": exactly according with
Paul's quotation, @Ro
12:19, of the same text.
Lord shall judge his people--in grace, or
else anger, according as each deserves: here, "judge," so
as to punish the reprobate apostate; there, "judge," so as
to interpose in behalf of, and save His people (@De
32:36).
31. fearful . . . to fall into
the hands--It is good like David to fall into the
hands of God, rather than man, when one does so with
filial faith in his father's love, though God
chastises him. "It is fearful" to fall into His hands
as a reprobate and presumptuous sinner doomed to His just
vengeance as Judge (@Heb
10:27).
living God--therefore able to punish for ever
(@Mt
10:28).
32. As previously he has
warned them by the awful end of apostates, so here he
stirs them up by the remembrance of their own former
faith, patience, and self-sacrificing love. So @Re
2:3,4.
call to remembrance--habitually: so the
present tense means.
illuminated--"enlightened": come to "the
knowledge of the truth" (@Heb
10:26) in connection with baptism (see on Heb 6:4). In
spiritual baptism, Christ, who is "the Light," is put on.
"On the one hand, we are not to sever the sign and the
grace signified where the sacrifice truly answers its
designs; on the other, the glass is not to be mistaken for
the liquor, nor the sheath for the sword" [BENGEL].
fight of--that is, consisting of
afflictions.
33. The persecutions here
referred to seem to have been endured by the Hebrew
Christians at their first conversion, not only in
Palestine, but also in Rome and elsewhere, the Jews in
every city inciting the populace and the Roman authorities
against Christians.
gazing-stock--as in a theater (so the
Greek): often used as the place of punishment in
the presence of the assembled multitudes. @Ac
19:29 1Co 4:9, "Made a theatrical spectacle to
the world."
ye became--of your own accord: attesting your
Christian sympathy with your suffering brethren.
companions of--sharers in affliction with.
34. ye had compassion on me in
my bonds--The oldest manuscripts and versions omit
"me," and read, "Ye both sympathized with those in
bonds (answering to the last clause of @Heb
10:33; compare @Heb
13:3,23 6:10), and accepted (so the Greek is
translated in @Heb
11:35) with joy (@Jas
1:2; joy in tribulations, as exercising faith
and other graces, @Ro
5:3; and the pledge of the coming glory, @Mt
5:12) the plundering of your (own) goods (answering to
the first clause of @Heb
10:33)."
in yourselves--The oldest manuscripts omit
"in": translate, "knowing that ye have for (or 'to')
yourselves."
better--a heavenly (@Heb
11:16).
enduring--not liable to spoiling.
substance--possession: peculiarly our own, if
we will not cast away our birthright.
35-37. Consequent
exhortation to confidence and endurance, as Christ is soon
coming.
Cast not away--implying that they now have
"confidence," and that it will not withdraw of itself,
unless they "cast it away" wilfully (compare @Heb
3:14).
which--Greek, "the which": inasmuch as
being such as.
hath--present tense: it is as certain as if
you had it in your hand (@Heb
10:37). It hath in reversion.
recompense of reward--of grace not of debt: a
reward of a kind which no mercenary self-seeker would
seek: holiness will be its own reward; self-devoting
unselfishness for Christ's sake will be its own rich
recompense (see on Heb 2:2; Heb 11:26).
36. patience--Greek,
"waiting endurance," or "enduring perseverance": the
kindred Greek verb in the Septuagint, @Hab
2:3, is translated, "wait for it" (compare @Jas
5:7).
after ye have done the will of God--"that
whereas ye have done the will of God" hitherto (@Heb
10:32-35), ye may now show also patient,
persevering endurance, and so "receive the promise,"
that is, the promised reward: eternal life and bliss
commensurate with our work of faith and love (@Heb
6:10-12). We must not only do, but also
suffer (@1Pe
4:19). God first uses the active talents of His
servants; then polishes the other side of the stone,
making the passive graces shine, patience,
meekness, &c. It may be also translated, "That ye may
do the will of God, and receive," &c. [ALFORD]:
"patience" itself is a further and a persevering doing of
"God's will"; otherwise it would be profitless and no real
grace (@Mt
7:21). We should look, not merely for individual bliss
now and at death, but for the great and general
consummation of bliss of all saints, both in body and
soul.
37, 38. Encouragement to
patient endurance by consideration of the shortness of the
time till Christ shall come, and God's rejection of him
that draws back, taken from @Hab
2:3,4.
a little while--(@Joh
16:16).
he that shall come--literally, "the Comer."
In Habakkuk, it is the vision that is said to be
about to come. Christ, being the grand and ultimate
subject of all prophetical vision, is here made by Paul,
under inspiration, the subject of the Spirit's prophecy by
Habakkuk, in its final and exhaustive fulfilment.
38. just--The oldest
manuscripts and Vulgate read, "my just man."
God is the speaker: "He who is just in My sight." BENGEL
translates, "The just shall live by my faith":
answering to the Hebrew, @Hab
2:4; literally, "the just shall live by the faith
of Him," namely, Christ, the final subject of
"the vision," who "will not lie," that is, disappoint.
Here not merely the first beginning, as in @Ga
3:11, but the continuance, of the spiritual
life of the justified man is referred to, as opposed to
declension and apostasy. As the justified man receives his
first spiritual life by faith, so it is by faith
that he shall continue to live (@Lu
4:4). The faith meant here is that fully
developed living trust in the unseen (@Heb
11:1) Saviour, which can keep men steadfast amidst
persecutions and temptations (@Heb
10:34-36).
but--Greek, "and."
if any man draw back--So the Greek
admits: though it might also be translated, as ALFORD
approves, "if he (the just man) draw back." Even
so, it would not disprove the final perseverance of
saints. For "the just man" in this latter clause would
mean one seemingly, and in part really, though not
savingly, "just" or justified: as in @Eze
18:24,26. In the Hebrew, this latter half of
the verse stands first, and is, "Behold, his soul which is
lifted up, is not upright in him." Habakkuk states the
cause of drawing back: a soul lifted up, and in
self-inflated unbelief setting itself up against God.
Paul, by the Spirit, states the effect, it draws
back. Also, what in Habakkuk is, "His soul is not
upright in him," is in Paul, "My soul shall have no
pleasure in him." Habakkuk states the cause, Paul
the effect: He who is not right in his own soul, does not
stand right with God; God has no pleasure in him. BENGEL
translates Habakkuk, "His soul is not upright in
respect to him," namely, Christ, the subject of "the
vision," that is, Christ has no pleasure in him
(compare @Heb
12:25). Every flower in spring is not a fruit in
autumn.
39. A Pauline elegant
turning-off from denunciatory warnings to charitable hopes
of his readers (@Ro
8:12).
saving of the soul--literally, "acquisition
(or obtaining) of the soul." The kindred Greek
verb is applied to Christ's acquiring the Church as
the purchase of His blood (@Ac
20:28). If we acquire or obtain our
soul's salvation, it is through Him who has obtained it
for us by His bloodshedding. "The unbelieving man loses
his soul: for not being God's, neither is he his own
[compare @Mt
16:26 with @Lu
9:25]: faith saves the soul by linking it to God" [DELITZSCH
in ALFORD].
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