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THE EPISTLE OF
PAUL THE APOSTLE TO THE
HEBREWS
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
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CHAPTER 12
@Heb
12:1-29. EXHORTATION TO
FOLLOW THE WITNESSES
OF FAITH
JUST MENTIONED:
NOT TO FAINT
IN TRIALS:
TO REMOVE
ALL BITTER
ROOTS OF SIN:
FOR WE
ARE UNDER, NOT
A LAW OF
TERROR, BUT THE
GOSPEL OF GRACE,
TO DESPISE
WHICH WILL
BRING THE HEAVIER
PENALTIES, IN
PROPORTION TO
OUR GREATER
PRIVILEGES.
1. we also--as well as
those recounted in @Heb
12:11.
are compassed about--Greek, "have so
great a cloud (a numberless multitude above us,
like a cloud, 'holy and pellucid,' [CLEMENT
OF ALEXANDRIA])
of witnesses surrounding us." The image is from a "race,"
an image common even in Palestine from the time of the
Greco-Macedonian empire, which introduced such Greek
usages as national games. The "witnesses" answer to the
spectators pressing round to see the competitors in their
contest for the prize (@Php
3:14). Those "witnessed of" (Greek, @Heb
11:5,39) become in their turn "witnesses" in a twofold
way: (1) attesting by their own case the faithfulness of
God to His people [ALFORD]
(@Heb
6:12), some of them martyrs in the modern
sense; (2) witnessing our struggle of faith; however, this
second sense of "witnesses," though agreeing with the
image here if it is to be pressed, is not
positively, unequivocally, and directly
sustained by Scripture. It gives vividness to the image;
as the crowd of spectators gave additional spirit to the
combatants, so the cloud of witnesses who have
themselves been in the same contest, ought to increase our
earnestness, testifying, as they do, to God's
faithfulness.
weight--As corporeal unwieldiness was,
through a disciplinary diet, laid aside by candidates for
the prize in racing; so carnal and worldly lusts, and all,
whether from without or within, that would impede the
heavenly runner, are the spiritual weight to be
laid aside. "Encumbrance," all superfluous weight;
the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eye, and the pride
of life, and even harmless and otherwise useful things
which would positively retard us (@Mr
10:50, the blind man casting away his garment
to come to Jesus; @Mr
9:42-48; compare @Eph
4:22 Col 3:9,10).
the sin which doth so easily beset us--Greek,
"sin which easily stands around us"; so LUTHER,
"which always so clings to us": "sinful propensity always
surrounding us, ever present and ready" [WAHL].
It is not primarily "the sin," &c., but sin
in general, with, however, special reference to
"apostasy," against which he had already warned them, as
one to which they might gradually be seduced; the
besetting sin of the Hebrews,
UNBELIEF.
with patience--Greek, "in persevering
endurance" (@Heb
10:36). On "run" compare @1Co
9:24,25.
2. Looking unto--literally,
"Looking from afar" (see on Heb 11:26); fixing the eyes
upon Jesus seated on the throne of God.
author--"Prince-leader." The same Greek
is translated, "Captain (of salvation)," @Heb
2:10; "Prince (of life)," @Ac
3:15. Going before us as the Originator of our faith,
and the Leader whose matchless example we are to follow
always. In this He is distinguished from all those
examples of faith in @Heb
11:2-40. (Compare @1Co
11:1). On His "faith" compare @Heb
2:13 3:12. Believers have ever looked to Him (@Heb
11:26 13:8).
finisher--Greek, "Perfecter,"
referring to @Heb
11:40.
of our faith--rather as Greek, "of
the faith," including both His faith (as exhibited in
what follows) and our faith. He fulfilled the ideal of
faith Himself, and so, both as a vicarious offering and an
example, He is the object of our faith.
for the joy . . . set before him--namely, of
presently after sitting down at the right hand of the
throne of God; including besides His own personal joy,
the joy of sitting there as a Prince and Saviour, to give
repentance and remission of sins. The coming joy disarmed
of its sting the present pain.
cross . . . shame--the great stumbling-block
to the Hebrews. "Despised," that is, disregarded.
3. For--justifying his
exhortation, "Looking unto Jesus."
consider--by way of comparison with
yourselves, so the Greek.
contradiction--unbelief, and every kind of
opposition (@Ac
28:19).
sinners--Sin assails us. Not sin,
but sinners, contradicted Christ [BENGEL].
be wearied and faint--Greek, "lest ye
weary fainting." Compare @Isa
49:4,5, as a specimen of Jesus not being wearied
out by the contradiction and strange unbelief
of those among whom He labored, preaching as never
man did, and exhibiting miracles wrought by His inherent
power, as none else could do.
4. not yet resisted unto blood--image
from pugilism, as he previously had the image of a
race, both being taken from the great national
Greek games. Ye have suffered the loss of goods,
and been a gazing-stock by reproaches and afflictions;
ye have not shed your blood (see on Heb 13:7). "The
athlete who hath seen his own blood, and who,
though cast down by his opponent, does not let his spirits
be cast down, who as often as he hath fallen hath risen
the more determined, goes down to the encounter with great
hope" [SENECA].
against sin--Sin is personified as an
adversary; sin, whether within you, leading you to
spare your blood, or in our adversaries, leading them
to shed it, if they cannot through your
faithfulness even unto blood, induce you to apostatize.
5. forgotten--"utterly," so
the Greek. Compare @Heb
12:15-17, in which he implies how utterly some
of them had forgotten God's word. His exhortation
ought to have more effect on you than the cheers and
exhortations of the spectators have on the competitors
striving in the games.
which--Greek, "the which," of which
the following is a specimen [ALFORD].
speaketh unto you--as in a dialogue or
discourse, so the Greek, implying God's
loving condescension (compare @Isa
1:18).
despise not--literally, "Do not hold of
little account." Betraying a contumacious spirit of
unbelief (@Heb
3:12), as "faint" implies a broken-down, weak, and
desponding spirit. "Chastening" is to be borne with
"subjection" (@Heb
12:9); "rebuke" (more severe than chastening)
is to be borne with endurance (@Heb
12:7). "Some in adversity kick against God's will,
others despond; neither is to be done by the Christian,
who is peculiarly the child of God. To him such adverse
things occur only by the decree of God, and that designed
in kindness, namely, to remove the defilements adhering to
the believer, and to exercise his patience" [GROTIUS].
6. (@Re
3:19.)
and--Greek, "yea and," "and moreover";
bringing out an additional circumstance.
scourgeth--which draws forth "blood" (@Heb
12:4).
receiveth--accepts. Takes to Himself as a son
"in whom He delighteth" (@Pr
3:12).
7. In @Heb
12:7,8 the need of "chastening" or "discipline" is
inculcated; in @Heb
12:9, the duty of those to whom it is administered.
If--The oldest manuscripts read, "With a view
to chastening (that is, since God's chastisement is with a
view to your chastening, that is, disciplinary
amelioration) endure patiently"; so Vulgate. ALFORD
translates it as indicative, not so well, "It is for
chastisement that ye are enduring."
dealeth with you--"beareth Himself toward
you" in the very act of chastening.
what son is he--"What son is there" even in
ordinary life? Much more God as to His sons (@Isa
48:10 Ac 14:22). The most eminent of God's saints were
the. most afflicted. God leads them by a way they know not
(@Isa
42:16). We too much look at each trial by itself,
instead of taking it in connection with the whole plan of
our salvation, as if a traveller were to complain of the
steepness and roughness of one turn in the path, without
considering that it led him into green pastures, on the
direct road to the city of habitation. The New Testament
alone uses the Greek term for education (paideia),
to express "discipline" or correction, as of a
child by a wise father.
8. if ye be without--excluded
from participation in chastisement, and wishing to be so.
all--all sons: all the worthies
enumerated in the eleventh chapter: all the witnesses
(@Heb
12:1).
are--Greek, "have been made."
then are ye bastards--of whom their fathers
take no care whether they are educated or not; whereas
every right-minded father is concerned for the moral
well-being of his legitimate son. "Since then not to be
chastised is a mark of bastardy, we ought [not to refuse,
but] rejoice in chastisement, as a mark of our genuine
sonship" [CHRYSOSTOM].
9. fathers . . . which
corrected us--rather as Greek, "We had the
fathers of our flesh as correctors."
subjection--See the punishment of
insubordination, @De
21:18.
Father of spirits--contrasted with "the
fathers of our flesh." "Generation by men is carnal, by
God is spiritual" [BENGEL].
As "Father of spirits," He is both the Originator, and the
Providential and Gracious Sustainer, at once of animal and
spiritual life. Compare "and LIVE,"
namely, spiritually; also @Heb
12:10, "that we might be partakers of His holiness" (@2Pe
1:4). God is a spirit Himself, and the Creator of
spirits like Himself, in contrast to men who are flesh,
and the progenitors of flesh (@Joh
3:6). Jesus our pattern "learned obedience"
experimentally by suffering (@Heb
5:8).
and live--and so, thereby live spiritually
and eternally.
10. Showing wherein the
chastisement of our heavenly Father is preferable to that
of earthly fathers.
for a few days--that is, with a view to
our well-being in the few days of our earthly life:
so the Greek.
after their own pleasure--Greek,
"according to what seemed fit to themselves." Their rule
of chastening is what may seem fit to their own often
erring judgment, temper, or caprice. The two defects of
human education are: (1) the prevalence in it of a view to
the interests of our short earthly term of days;
(2) the absence in parents of the unerring wisdom of our
heavenly Father. "They err much at one time in severity,
at another in indulgence [@1Sa
3:13 Eph 6:4], and do not so much chasten as
THINK they chasten"
[BENGEL].
that we might be partakers of his holiness--becoming
holy as He is holy (@Joh
15:2). To become holy like God is tantamount to
being educated for passing eternity with God (@Heb
12:14 2Pe 1:4). So this "partaking of God's holiness"
stands in contrast to the "few days" of this life, with a
view to which earthly fathers generally educate their
sons.
11. joyous . . . grievous--Greek,
"matter of joy . . . matter of grief." The objection that
chastening is grievous is here anticipated and answered.
It only seems so to those being chastened, whose judgments
are confused by the present pain. Its ultimate fruit
amply compensates for any temporary pam. The real object
of the fathers in chastening is not that they find
pleasure in the children's pain. Gratified wishes, our
Father knows, would often be our real curses.
fruit of righteousness--righteousness
(in practice, springing from faith) is the fruit
which chastening, the tree yields (@Php
1:11). "Peaceable" (compare @Isa
32:17): in contrast to the ordeal of conflict by which
it has been won. "Fruit of righteousness to be enjoyed in
peace after the conflict" [THOLUCK].
As the olive garland, the emblem of peace as well
as victory, was put on the victor's brow in the
games.
exercised thereby--as athletes exercised in
training for a contest. Chastisement is the
exercise to give experience, and make the spiritual
combatant irresistibly victorious (@Ro
5:3). "Oh, happy the servant for whose improvement his
Lord is earnest, with whom he deigns to be angry, whom He
does not deceive by dissembling admonition" (withholding
admonition, and so leading the man to think he needs it
not)! [TERTULLIAN,
Patience, 11]. Observe the "afterwards"; that
is the time often when God works.
12. He addresses them as
runners in a race, and pugilists, and warriors [CHRYSOSTOM].
The "wherefore" is resumed from @Heb
12:1.
lift up--In @Isa
35:3, from which Paul here quotes, it is, "Strengthen
ye the weak hands." The hand is the symbol of one's
strength. ALFORD
translates, "Put straight again the relaxed hands."
English Version expresses the sense well.
feeble--literally, "paralyzed"; a word used
only by Luke, Paul's companion, in the New
Testament. The exhortation has three parts: the first
relates to ourselves, @Heb
12:12,13; the second, to others, @Heb
12:14, "peace with all men"; the third, to God,
"holiness, without which," &c. The first is referred to in
@Heb
12:15, "test any man fail of the grace of God"; the
second in the words, "lest any root of bitterness," &c.;
the third in @Heb
12:16, "Lest there be any fornicator or profane
person," &c. This threefold relation often occurs in
Paul's Epistles. Compare Note, see on Tit 2:12,
"soberly, righteously, and godly." The Greek active
verb, not the middle or reflexive, requires the sense to
be, Lift up not only your own hands and knees, but
also those of your brethren (compare @Heb
12:15 Isa 35:4).
13. Quoted from @Pr
4:26, Septuagint, "Make straight paths for thy
feet."
straight--that is, leading by a straight road
to joy and grace (@Heb
12:1,2,15). Cease to "halt" between Judaism and
Christianity [BENGEL].
paths--literally, "wheel tracks." Let your
walk be so firm and so unanimous in the right direction
that a plain track and "highway" may be thereby
established for those who accompany and follow you, to
perceive and walk in (@Isa
35:8) [ALFORD].
that which is lame--those "weak in the faith"
(@Ro
14:1), having still Judaizing prejudices.
be turned out of the way--(@Pr
4:27); and, so missing the way, lose the prize of "the
race" (@Heb
12:1).
rather he healed--Proper exercise of itself
contributes to health; the habit of walking straight
onward in the right way tends to
healing.
14. follow peace with all men--with
the brethren especially (@Ro
14:19), that so the "lame" among them be not "turned
out of the way" (@Heb
12:13), and that no one of them "fail of the grace of
God" (@Heb
12:15).
holiness--a distinct Greek word from
God's "holiness" (@Heb
12:10). Translate here "sanctification." His is
absolute holiness: our part is to put on His
holiness, becoming "holy as He is holy," by
sanctification. While "following peace with all men,"
we are not so to seek to please them, as to make God's
will and our sanctification a secondary object; this
latter must be our first aim. (@Ga
1:10).
without which--Greek, "apart from
which."
no man shall see the Lord--no man as a
son; in heavenly glory (@Re
22:3,4). In the East, none but the greatest favorites
are admitted to the honor of seeing the king (compare @2Sa
14:24). The Lord being pure and holy, none but the
pure and holy shall see Him (@Mt
5:8). Without holiness in them, they could not enjoy
Him who is holiness itself (@Zec
14:20). The connection of purity with seeing
the Lord, appears in @1Jo
3:2,3 Eph 5:5. Contrast @Heb
12:16 (compare @1Th
4:3). In @Mt
24:30 Re 1:7, it is said that all shall see the Lord;
but, that shall be as a Judge, not as their lasting
portion and God, which is meant here. The Greek
verb does not denote the mere action of seeing, but the
seer's state of mind to which the object is presented: so
in @Mt
5:8 they shall truly comprehend God [TITTMANN].
None but the holy could appreciate the holy God,
none else therefore shall abide in His presence. "The bad
shall only see Him in His form as Son of man
[compare @Re
1:13, with @Re
1:7; and @Mt
24:30 Ac 1:11 17:31]; still it will be in the glory in
which He shall judge, not in the lowliness in which He was
judged. His form as God, wherein He is equal to the
Father, without doubt the ungodly shall not see; for it is
only 'the pure in heart who shall see God'" [AUGUSTINE].
"He shall come to judge, who stood before a judge. He
shall come in the form in which He was judged, that they
may see Him whom they pierced: He who was before hidden
shall come manifested in power: He, as Judge, shall
condemn the real culprits, who was Himself falsely made a
culprit."
15. lest any . . . fall--Greek,
"lest any (namely, through sloth in running) failing,"
or "falling short of the grace of God . . .
trouble you." The image is taken from a company of
travellers, one of whom lags behind, and so never reaches
the end of the long and laborious journey [CHRYSOSTOM].
root of bitterness--not merely a "bitter
root," which might possibly bring forth sweet fruits;
this, a root whose essence is "bitterness,"
never could. Paul here refers to @De
29:18, "Lest there should be among you a root that
beareth gall and wormwood" (compare @Ac
8:23). Root of bitterness comprehends every
person (compare @Heb
12:16) and every principle of doctrine or
practice so radically corrupt as to spread corruption all
around. The only safety is in rooting out such a root of
bitterness.
many--rather, "the many," that is, the
whole congregation. So long as it is hidden under the
earth it cannot be remedied, but when it "springs up," it
must be dealt with boldly. Still remember the caution (@Mt
13:26-30) as to rooting out persons. No such
danger can arise in rooting out bad
principles.
16. fornicator--(@Heb
13:4 1Co 10:8).
or profane--Fornication is nearly akin
to gluttony, Esau's sin. He profanely cast away his
spiritual privilege for the gratification of his palate. @Ge
25:34 graphically portrays him. An example well fitted
to strike needful horror into the Hebrews, whosoever of
them, like Esau, were only sons of Isaac according to the
flesh [BENGEL].
for one morsel--The smallness of the
inducement only aggravates the guilt of casting away
eternity for such a trifle, so far is it from being a
claim for mercy (compare @Ge
3:6). One single act has often the greatest
power either for good or for evil. So in the cases of
Reuben and Saul, for evil (@Ge
49:4 1Ch 5:1 1Sa 13:12-14); and, on the other hand,
for good, Abraham and Phinehas (@Ge
12:1, &c. @Ge
15:5,6 Nu 25:6-15).
his birthright--Greek, "his own (so
the oldest manuscripts read, intensifying the suicidal
folly and sin of the act) rights of primogeniture,"
involving the high spiritual privilege of being ancestor
of the promised seed, and heir of the promises in Him. The
Hebrews whom Paul addressed, had, as Christians, the
spiritual rights of primogeniture (compare @Heb
12:23): he intimates that they must exercise holy
self-control, if they wish not, like Esau, to forfeit
them.
17. afterwards--Greek,
"even afterward." He despised his birthright,
accordingly also he was despised and rejected when
he wished to have the blessing. As in the believer's case,
so in the unbeliever's, there is an "afterwards" coming,
when the believer shall look on his past griefs, and the
unbeliever on his past joys, in a very different light
from that in which they were respectively viewed at the
time. Compare "Nevertheless afterward," &c. @Heb
12:11, with the "afterward" here.
when he would--when he wished to have.
"He that will not when he may, when he will, shall have
nay" (@Pr
1:24-30 Lu 13:34,35 19:42).
he was rejected--not as to every blessing,
but only that which would have followed the primogeniture.
he found no place of repentance--The cause
is here put for the effect, "repentance" for the
object which Esau aimed at in his so-called repentance,
namely, the change of his father's determination to
give the chief blessing to Jacob. Had he sought
real repentance with tears he would have found
it (@Mt
7:7). But he did not find it because this was not what
he sought. What proves his tears were not those of
one seeking true repentance is, immediately after he was
foiled in his desire. he resolved to murder Jacob! He shed
tears, not for his sin, but for his suffering the penalty
of his sin. His were tears of vain regret and remorse, not
of repentance. "Before, he might have had the blessing
without tears; afterwards, no matter how many tears he
shed, he was rejected. Let us use the time" (@Lu
18:27)! [BENGEL].
ALFORD
explains "repentance" here, a chance, by repenting, to
repair (that is, to regain the lost blessing). I agree
with him that the translation, instead of "repentance,"
"no place for changing HIS
FATHER'S mind," is forced;
though doubtless this is what was the true aim of the
"repentance" which he sought. The language is framed to
apply to profane despisers who wilfully cast away
grace and seek repentance (that is, not real; but
escape from the penalty of their sin), but in vain.
Compare "afterward," @Mt
25:11,12. Tears are no proof of real repentance (@1Sa
24:16,17; contrast @Ps
56:8).
it--the blessing, which was the real
object of Esau, though ostensibly seeking "repentance."
18. For--The fact that we
are not under the law, but under a higher, and that the
last dispensation, the Gospel, with its glorious
privileges, is the reason why especially the Hebrew
Christians should "look diligently," &c. (@Heb
12:15,16).
are not come--Greek, "have not come
near to." Alluding to @De
4:11, "Ye came near and stood under the
mountain; and the mountain burned with fire . . . with
darkness, clouds, and thick darkness." "In your coming
near unto God, it has not been to," &c.
the mount--The oldest manuscripts and
Vulgate omit "the mount." But still, "the mount" must
be supplied from @Heb
12:22.
that might be touched--palpable and material.
Not that any save Moses was allowed to touch it (@Ex
19:12,13). The Hebrews drew near to the material Mount
Sinai with material bodies; we, to the spiritual mount in
the spirit. The "darkness" was that formed by the clouds
hanging round the mount; the "tempest" accompanied the
thunder.
19. trumpet--to rouse
attention, and herald God's approach (@Ex
19:16).
entreated that the word should not be spoken--literally,
"that speech should not be added to them"; not that they
refused to hear the word of God, but they wished that God
should not Himself speak, but employ Moses as His
mediating spokesman. "The voice of words" was the
Decalogue, spoken by God Himself, a voice issuing forth,
without any form being seen: after which "He
added no more" (@De
5:22).
20. that which was commanded--"the
interdict" [TITTMANN].
A stern interdictory mandate is meant.
And--rather, "Even if a beast (much more a
man) touch," &c.
or thrust through with a dart--omitted in the
oldest manuscripts. The full interdict in @Ex
19:12,13 is abbreviated here; the beast alone, being
put for "whether man or beast"; the stoning, which
applies to the human offender, alone being
specified, the beast's punishment, namely, the being
thrust through with a dart, being left to be
understood.
21. the sight--the
vision of God's majesty.
quake--Greek, "I am in trembling";
"fear" affected his mind: "trembling," his body.
Moses is not recorded in Exodus to have used these words.
But Paul, by inspiration, supplies (compare @Ac
20:35 2Ti 3:8) this detail. We read in @De
9:19, Septuagint, of similar words used by
Moses after breaking the two tables, through fear of God's
anger at the people's sin in making the golden calves. He
doubtless similarly "feared" in hearing the ten
commandments spoken by the voice of Jehovah.
22. are come--Greek,
"have come near unto" (compare @De
4:11). Not merely, ye shall come, but, ye
have already come.
Mount Sion--antitypical Sion, the heavenly
Jerusalem, of which the spiritual invisible Church (of
which the first foundation was laid in literal Zion, @Joh
12:15 1Pe 2:6) is now the earnest; and of which the
restored literal Jerusalem hereafter shall be the earthly
representative, to be succeeded by the everlasting and
"new Jerusalem, coming down from God out of heaven" (@Re
21:2-27; compare @Heb
11:10).
22, 23. to an innumerable
company of angels, to the general assembly and church--The
city of God having been mentioned, the mention of
its citizens follows. Believers being like the angels (@Job
1:6 38:7), "sons of God," are so their "equals" (@Lu
20:36); and being reconciled through Christ, are
adopted into God's great and blessed family. For the full
completion of this we pray (@Mt
6:10). English Version arrangement is opposed:
(1) by "and" always beginning each new member of the whole
sentence; (2) "general assembly and Church," form a kind
of tautology; (3) "general assembly," or rather, "festal
full assembly," "the jubilant full company" (such as were
the Olympic games, celebrated with joyous singing,
dancing, &c.), applies better to the angels above,
ever hymning God's praises, than to the Church, of which a
considerable part is now militant on earth. Translate
therefore, "to myriads (ten thousands, compare @De
33:2 Ps 68:17 Da 7:10 Jude 1:14; namely), the full
festal assembly of angels, and the Church of the
first-born." Angels and saints together constitute the
ten thousands. Compare "all angels, all
nations" @Mt
25:31,32. Messiah is pre-eminently "the First-born,"
or "First-begotten" (@Heb
1:6), and all believers become so by adoption. Compare
the type, @Nu
3:12,45,50 1Pe 1:18. As the kingly and priestly
succession was in the first-born, and as Israel was God's
"first-born" (@Ex
4:22; compare @Ex
13:2), and a "kingdom of priests" to God (@Ex
19:6), so believers (@Re
1:6).
23. written in heaven--enrolled
as citizens there. All those who at the coming of
"God the Judge of all" (which clause therefore naturally
follows), shall be found "written in heaven," that is,
in the Lamb's book of life (@Re
21:27). Though still fighting the good fight on earth,
still, in respect to your destiny, and present life of
faith which substantiates things hoped for, ye are
already members of the heavenly citizenship. "We are one
citizenship with angels; to which it is said in the psalm,
Glorious things are spoken of thee, thou city of God"
[AUGUSTINE].
I think ALFORD
wrong in restricting "the Church of the first-born
written in heaven," to those militant on earth; it is
rather, all those who at the Judge's coming
shall be found written in heaven (the true patent of
heavenly nobility; contrast "written in the earth," @Jer
17:13, and Esau's profane sale of his birthright, @Heb
12:16); these all, from the beginning to the end of
the world, forming one Church to which every
believer is already come. The first-born of Israel
were "written" in a roll (@Nu
3:40).
the spirits of just men made perfect--at the
resurrection, when the "JUDGE"
shall appear, and believers' bliss shall be consummated by
the union of the glorified body with the spirit;
the great hope of the New Testament (@Ro
8:20-23 1Th 4:16). The place of this clause after
"the JUDGE OF ALL,"
is my objection to BENGEL
and ALFORD'S
explanation, the souls of the just in their separate
state perfected. Compare Notes, see on Heb
11:39,40, to which he refers here, and which I think
confirms my view; those heretofore spirits, but now
to be perfected by being clothed upon with the body. Still
the phrase, "spirits of just men made perfect," not
merely "just men made perfect," may favor the reference to
the happy spirits in their separate state. The Greek
is not "the perfected spirits," but "the spirits of
the perfected just." In no other passage are the
just said to be perfected before the
resurrection, and the completion of the full number of the
elect (@Re
6:11); I think, therefore, "spirits of the just," may
here be used to express the just whose predominant
element in their perfected state shall be spirit. So
spirit and spirits are used of a man
or men in the body, under the influence of the spirit,
the opposite of flesh (@Joh
3:6). The resurrection bodies of the saints shall be
bodies in which the spirit shall altogether
preponderate over the animal soul (see on
1Co 15:44).
24. new--not the usual term
(kaine) applied to the Christian covenant (@Heb
9:15), which would mean new as different
from, and superseding the old; but Greek,
"nea," "recent," "lately established," having the
"freshness of youth," as opposed to age. The mention of
Jesus, the Perfecter of our faith (@Heb
12:2), and Himself perfected through sufferings and
death, in His resurrection and ascension (@Heb
2:10 5:9), is naturally suggested by the mention of
"the just made perfect" at their resurrection
(compare @Heb
7:22). Paul uses "Jesus," dwelling here on Him as the
Person realized as our loving friend, not merely in His
official character as the Christ.
and to the blood of sprinkling--here
enumerated as distinct from "Jesus." BENGEL
reasonably argues as follows: His blood was entirely
"poured out" of His body by the various ways in which it
was shed, His bloody sweat, the crown of thorns, the
scourging, the nails, and after death the spear, just as
the blood was entirely poured out and extravasated from
the animal sacrifices of the law. It was incorruptible
(@1Pe
1:18,19). No Scripture states it was again put into
the Lord's body. At His ascension, as our great High
Priest, He entered the heavenly holiest place "BY
His own blood" (not after shedding His blood, nor
with the blood in His body, but), carrying it
separately from his body (compare the type, @Heb
9:7,12,25 13:11). Paul does not say, by the efficacy
of His blood, but, "by His own proper blood" (@Heb
9:12); not MATERIAL
blood, but "the blood of Him who, through the eternal
Spirit, offered Himself without spot unto God" (@Heb
9:14). So in @Heb
10:29, the Son of God and the blood of the
covenant wherewith he (the professor) was
sanctified, are mentioned separately. Also in @Heb
13:12,20; also compare @Heb
10:19, with @Heb
10:21. So in the Lord's Supper (@1Co
10:16 11:24-26), the body and blood are
separately represented. The blood itself, therefore,
continues still in heaven before God, the perpetual ransom
price of "the eternal covenant" (@Heb
13:20). Once for all Christ sprinkled the blood
peculiarly for us at His ascension (@Heb
9:12). But it is called "the blood of sprinkling," on
account also of its continued use in heaven, and in the
consciences of the saints on earth (@Heb
9:14 10:22 Isa 52:15). This sprinkling is analogous to
the sprinkled blood of the Passover. Compare @Re
5:6, "In the midst of the throne, a Lamb as it had
been slain." His glorified body does not require meat,
nor the circulation of the blood. His blood introduced
into heaven took away the dragon's right to accuse. Thus
Rome's theory of concomitancy of the blood with the
body, the excuse for giving only the bread to the laity,
falls to the ground. The mention of "the blood of
sprinkling" naturally follows the mention of the
"covenant," which could not be consecrated without
blood (@Heb
9:18,22).
speaketh better things than that of Abel--namely,
than the sprinkling (the best manuscripts read the article
masculine, which refers to "sprinkling," not to
"blood," which last is neuter) of blood by Abel in his
sacrifice spake. This comparison between two things of
the same kind (namely, Christ's sacrifice, and Abel's
sacrifice) is more natural, than between two things
different in kind and in results (namely, Christ's
sacrifice, and Abel's own blood [ALFORD],
which was not a sacrifice at all); compare @Heb
11:4 Ge 4:4. This accords with the whole tenor of the
Epistle, and of this passage in particular (@Heb
12:18-22), which is to show the superiority of
Christ's sacrifice and the new covenant, to the Old
Testament sacrifices (of which Abel's is the first
recorded; it, moreover, was testified to by God as
acceptable to Him above Cain's), compare @Heb
9:1-10:39. The word "better" implies superiority to
something that is good: but Abel's own blood was not at
all good for the purpose for which Christ's blood was
efficacious; nay, it cried for vengeance. So ARCHBISHOP
MAGEE, HAMMOND,
and KNATCHBULL.
BENGEL takes
"the blood of Abel" as put for all the blood shed
on earth crying for vengeance, and greatly increasing the
other cries raised by sin in the world; counteracted by
the blood of Christ calmly speaking in heaven for us, and
from heaven to us. I prefer MAGEE'S
view. Be this as it may, to deny that Christ's atonement
is truly a propitiation, overthrows Christ's priesthood,
makes the sacrifices of Moses' law an unmeaning mummery,
and represents Cain's sacrifice as good as that of Abel.
25. refuse not--through
unbelief.
him that speaketh--God in Christ. As the
blood of sprinkling is represented as speaking
to God for us, @Heb
12:24; so here God is represented as speaking to us (@Heb
1:1,2). His word now is the prelude of the last
"shaking" of all things (@Heb
12:27). The same word which is heard in the Gospel
from heaven, will shake heaven and earth (@Heb
12:26).
who refused him--Greek, "refusing as
they did." Their seemingly submissive entreaty that the
word should not be spoken to them by God any more (@Heb
12:19), covered over refractory hearts, as. their
subsequent deeds showed (@Heb
3:16).
that spake--revealing with oracular
warnings His divine will: so the Greek.
if we turn away--Greek, "we who turn
away." The word implies greater refractoriness than
"refused," or "declined."
him that speaketh from heaven--God, by His
Son in the Gospel, speaking from His heavenly throne.
Hence, in Christ's preaching frequent mention is made of
"the kingdom of the heavens" (Greek, @Mt
3:2). In the giving of the law God spake on earth
(namely, Mount Sinai) by angels (@Heb
2:2; compare @Heb
1:2). In @Ex
20:22, when God says, "I talked with you from
heaven," this passage in Hebrews shows that not the
highest heavens, but the visible heavens, the clouds and
darkness, are meant, out of which God by angels proclaimed
the law on Sinai.
26. then shook--when He
gave the law on Sinai.
now--under the Gospel.
promised--The announcement of His coming to
break up the present order of things, is to the ungodly a
terror, to the godly a promise, the fulfilment of which
they look for with joyful hope.
Yet once more--Compare Notes, see on
Hag 2:6; Hag 2:21,22, both of which passages are condensed
into one here. The shaking began at the first coming of
Messiah; it will be completed at His second coming,
prodigies in the world of nature accompanying the
overthrow of all kingdoms that oppose Messiah. The
Hebrew is literally, "it is yet one little," that is,
a single brief space till the series of movements begins
ending in the advent of Messiah. Not merely the earth, as
at the establishment of the Sinaitic covenant, but heaven
also is to be shaken. The two advents of Messiah are
regarded as one, the complete shaking belonging to the
second advent, of which the presage was given in the
shakings at the first advent: the convulsions connected
with the overthrow of Jerusalem shadowing forth those
about to be at the overthrow of all the God-opposed
kingdoms by the coming Messiah.
27. this word, Yet once
more--So Paul, by the Spirit, sanctions the
Septuagint rendering of @Hag
2:6, giving an additional feature to the prophecy in
the Hebrew, as rendered in English Version,
not merely that it shall be in a little while, but
that it is to be "once more" as the final act. The
stress of his argument is on the "ONCE."
Once for all; once and for ever. "In saying 'once
more,' the Spirit implies that something has already
passed, and something else shall be which is to remain,
and is no more to be changed to something else; for the
once is exclusive, that is, not many times" [ESTIUS].
those things that are shaken--the heaven and
the earth. As the shaking is to be total, so shall
the removal be, making way for the better things that are
unremovable. Compare the Jewish economy (the type of the
whole present order of things) giving way to the new and
abiding covenant: the forerunner of the everlasting state
of bliss.
as of things . . . made--namely, of this
present visible creation: compare @2Co
5:1 Heb 9:11, "made with hands . . . of this
creation," that is, things so made at creation that
they would not remain of themselves, but be removed. The
new abiding heaven and earth are also made by God,
but they are of a higher nature than the material
creation, being made to partake of the divine nature of
Him who is not made: so in this relation, as one
with the uncreated God, they are regarded as not of the
same class as the things made. The things made
in the former sense do not remain; the things of
the new heaven and earth, like the uncreated God, "shall
REMAIN before
God" (@Isa
66:22). The Spirit, the seed of the new and heavenly
being, not only of the believer's soul, but also of the
future body, is an uncreated and immortal
principle.
28. receiving--as we do, in
prospect and sure hope, also in the possession of the
Spirit the first-fruits. This is our privilege as
Christians.
let us have grace--"let us have thankfulness"
[ALFORD after
CHRYSOSTOM].
But (1) this translation is according to classical
Greek, not Paul's phraseology for "to be thankful."
(2) "To God" would have been in that case added. (3)
"Whereby we may serve God," suits the English Version
"grace" (that is Gospel grace, the work of the Spirit,
producing faith exhibited in serving God), but does
not suit "thankfulness."
acceptably--Greek, "well-pleasingly."
reverence and godly fear--The oldest
manuscripts read, "reverent caution and fear." Reverent
caution (same Greek as in @Heb
5:7; see on Heb 5:7) lest we should offend God, who is
of purer eyes than to behold iniquity. Fear lest we
should bring destruction on ourselves.
29. Greek, "For
even": "for also"; introducing an additional solemn
incentive to diligence. Quoted from @De
4:24.
our God--in whom we hope, is also to
be feared. He is love (@1Jo
4:8,16); yet there is another side of His character;
God has wrath against sin (@Heb
10:27,31).
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