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THE EPISTLE OF
PAUL THE APOSTLE TO THE
HEBREWS
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
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CHAPTER 13
@Heb
13:1-25. EXHORTATION TO
VARIOUS GRACES,
ESPECIALLY CONSTANCY
IN FAITH,
FOLLOWING JESUS
AMIDST REPROACHES.
CONCLUSION, WITH
PIECES OF INTELLIGENCE
AND SALUTATIONS.
1. brotherly love--a
distinct special manifestation of "charity" or "love" (@2Pe
1:7). The Church of Jerusalem, to which in part this
Epistle was addressed, was distinguished by this grace, we
know from Acts (compare @Heb
6:10 10:32-34 12:12,13).
continue--Charity will itself
continue. See that it
continue with you.
7. Two manifestations of
"brotherly love," hospitality and care for those
in bonds.
Be not forgetful--implying it was a duty
which they all recognized, but which they might forget to
act on (@Heb
13:3,7,16). The enemies of Christianity themselves
have noticed the practice of this virtue among Christians
[JULIAN,
Epistles, 49].
entertained angels unawares--Abraham and Lot
did so (@Ge
18:2 19:1). To obviate the natural distrust felt of
strangers, Paul says, an unknown guest may be better than
he looks: he may be unexpectedly found to be as much a
messenger of God for good, as the angels (whose name
means messenger) are; nay more, if a Christian, he
represents Christ Himself. There is a play on the same
Greek word, Be not forgetful and unaware;
let not the duty of hospitality to strangers
escape you; for, by entertaining strangers, it has
escaped the entertainers that they were entertaining
angels. Not unconscious and forgetful of the duty, they
have unconsciously brought on themselves the blessing.
3. Remember--in prayers and
acts of kindness.
bound with them--by virtue of the unity of
the members in the body under one Head, Christ (@1Co
12:26).
suffer adversity--Greek, "are in evil
state."
being yourselves also in the body--and so
liable to the adversities incident to the natural body,
which ought to dispose you the more to sympathize with
them, not knowing how soon your own turn of suffering may
come. "One experiences adversity almost his whole life, as
Jacob; another in youth, as Joseph; another in manhood, as
Job; another in old age" [BENGEL].
4. is,
&c.--Translate, "Let marriage be treated as
honorable": as @Heb
13:5 also is an exhortation.
in all--"in the case of all men": "among
all." "To avoid fornication let
EVERY MAN have his own wife" (@1Co
7:2). Judaism and Gnosticism combined were soon about
to throw discredit on marriage. The venerable Paphnutius,
in the Council of Nice, quoted this verse for the
justification of the married state. If one does not
himself marry, he should not prevent others from doing so.
Others, especially Romanists, translate, "in all
things," as in @Heb
13:18. But the warning being against lasciviousness,
the contrast to "whoremongers and adulterers"
in the parallel clause, requires the "in all" in this
clause to refer to persons.
the bed undefiled--Translate, as Greek
requires "undefiled" to be a predicate, not an
epithet, "And let the bed be undefiled."
God will judge--Most whoremongers escape the
notice of human tribunals; but God takes particular
cognizance of those whom man does not punish. Gay
immoralities will then be regarded in a very different
light from what they are now.
5. conversation--"manner of
life." The love of filthy lust and the love of filthy
lucre follow one another as closely akin, both alienating
the heart from the Creator to the creature.
such things as ye have--literally, "present
things" (@Php
4:11).
I will never leave thee, nor forsake thee--A
promise tantamount to this was given to Jacob (@Ge
28:15), to Israel (@De
31:6,8), to Joshua (@Jos
1:5), to Solomon (@1Ch
28:20). It is therefore like a divine adage. What was
said to them, extends also to us. He will neither withdraw
His presence ("never leave thee") nor His help
("nor forsake thee") [BENGEL].
6. may--rather as Greek,
expressing confidence actually realized, "So that we
boldly (confidently) say" (@Ps
56:4,11 118:6). Punctuate as both the Hebrew
and the Greek require, "And (so) I will not fear:
what (then) shall man do unto me?"
7. Remember--so as to
imitate: not to invoke in prayer, as Rome teaches.
have the rule--rather, "who have had
the rule over you": your spiritual leaders.
who--Greek, "the which": such persons
as.
have spoken unto you--"spake" (so the
Greek aorist means) during their lifetime. This
Epistle was among those written later, when many of the
heads of the Jerusalem Church had passed away.
whose faith--even unto death: probably death
by martyrdom, as in the case of the instances of faith
in @Heb
11:35. Stephen, James the brother of our Lord and
bishop of Jerusalem, as well as James the brother of John
(@Ac
12:2), in the Palestinian Church, which Paul
addresses, suffered martyrdom.
considering--Greek, "looking up to,"
"diligently contemplating all over," as an artist would a
model.
the end--the termination, at death. The
Greek, is used of decease (@Lu
9:31 2Pe 1:15).
of their conversation--"manner of life":
"religious walk" (@Ga
1:13 Eph 4:22 1Ti 4:12 Jas 3:13). Considering
how they manifested the soundness of their faith by their
holy walk, which they maintained even to the end
of that walk (their death by martyrdom).
8. This verse is not, as
some read it, in apposition with "the end of their
conversation" (@Heb
13:7), but forms the transition. "Jesus Christ,
yesterday and to-day (is) the same, and (shall be the
same) unto the ages (that is, unto all ages)." The
Jesus Christ (the full name being given, to mark with
affectionate solemnity both His person and His
office) who supported your spiritual rulers
through life even unto their end "yesterday" (in
times past), being at once "the Author and the Finisher of
their faith" (@Heb
12:2), remains still the same Jesus Christ "to-day,"
ready to help you also, if like them you walk by "faith"
in Him. Compare "this same Jesus," @Ac
1:11. He who yesterday (proverbial for the past
time) suffered and died, is to-day in glory (@Re
1:18). "As night comes between yesterday and to-day,
and yet night itself is swallowed up by yesterday
and to-day, so the "suffering" did not so interrupt
the glory of Jesus Christ which was of yesterday, and that
which is to-day, as not to continue to be the same. He is
the same yesterday, before He came into the world,
and to-day, in heaven. Yesterday in the time
of our predecessors, and to-day in our age" [BENGEL].
So the doctrine is the same, not variable: this
verse thus forms the transition between @Heb
13:7 and @Heb
13:9. He is always "the same" (@Heb
1:12). The same in the Old and in the New Testament.
9. about--rather, as oldest
manuscripts read, "carried aside"; namely, compare
@Eph
4:14.
divers--differing from the one faith in the
one and the same Jesus Christ, as taught by them who had
the rule over you (@Heb
13:7).
strange--foreign to the truth.
doctrines--"teachings."
established with grace; not with meats--not
with observances of Jewish distinctions between clean and
unclean meats, to which ascetic Judaizers added in
Christian times the rejection of some meats, and the use
of others: noticed also by Paul in @1Co
8:8,13 6:13 Ro 14:17, an exact parallel to this verse:
these are some of the "divers and strange doctrines" of
the previous sentence. Christ's body offered once for all
for us, is our true spiritual "meat" to "eat" (@Heb
13:10), "the stay and the staff of bread" (@Isa
3:1), the mean of all "grace."
which have not profited--Greek, "in
which they who walked were not profited"; namely, in
respect to justification, perfect cleansing of the
conscience, and sanctification. Compare on "walked," @Ac
21:21; namely, with superstitious scrupulosity, as
though the worship of God in itself consisted in such
legal observances.
10. Christianity and
Judaism are so totally distinct, that "they who serve the
(Jewish) tabernacle," have no right to eat our spiritual
Gospel meat, namely, the Jewish priests, and those who
follow their guidance in serving the ceremonial ordinance.
He says, "serve the tabernacle," not "serve
IN the tabernacle."
Contrast with this servile worship ours.
an altar--the cross of Christ, whereon His
body was offered. The Lord's table represents this altar,
the cross; as the bread and wine represent the sacrifice
offered on it. Our meat, which we by faith spiritually
eat, is the flesh of Christ, in contrast to the typical
ceremonial meats. The two cannot be combined (@Ga
5:2). That not a literal eating of the sacrifice of
Christ is meant in the Lord's Supper, but a spiritual is
meant, appears from comparing @Heb
13:9 with @Heb
13:10, "with GRACE, NOT
with MEATS."
11, 12. For just as "the
bodies of those beasts whose blood is brought into the
sanctuary by . . . are burned without the camp," so "Jesus
also that . . . suffered without the gate" of ceremonial
Judaism, of which His crucifixion outside the gate of
Jerusalem is a type.
for--reason why they who serve the
tabernacle, are excluded from share in Christ; because His
sacrifice is not like one of those sacrifices in which
they had a share but answers to one which was "wholly
burned" outside (the Greek is "burnt completely,"
"consumed by burning"), and which consequently they could
not eat of. @Le
6:30, gives the general rule, "No sin offering whereof
any of the blood is brought into the tabernacle of the
congregation to reconcile withal in the holy place, shall
be eaten; it shall be burnt in the fire." The sin
offerings are twofold: the outward, whose blood was
sprinkled on the outward altar, and of whose bodies the
priests might eat; and the inward, the reverse.
the sanctuary--here the Holy of Holies,
into which the blood of the sin offering was brought on
the day of atonement.
without the camp--in which were the
tabernacle and Levitical priests and legal worshippers,
during Israel's journey through the wilderness; replaced
afterwards by Jerusalem (containing the temple), outside
of whose walls Jesus was crucified.
12. Wherefore Jesus--In
order that the Antitype might fulfil the type.
sanctify--Though not brought into the temple
"sanctuary" (@Heb
13:11) His blood has been brought into the heavenly
sanctuary, and "sanctifies the people" (@Heb
2:11,17), by cleansing them from sin, and consecrating
them to God.
his own--not blood of animals.
without the gate--of Jerusalem; as if
unworthy of the society of the covenant-people. The fiery
ordeal of His suffering on the cross, answers to
the burning of the victims; thereby His mere
fleshly life was completely destroyed, as their bodies
were; the second part of His offering was His carrying His
blood into the heavenly holiest before God at His
ascension, that it should be a perpetual atonement for the
world's sin.
13. therefore--This
"therefore" breathes the deliberate fortitude of believers
[BENGEL].
without the camp--"outside the legal polity"
[THEODORET]
of Judaism (compare @Heb
13:11) "Faith considers Jerusalem itself as a camp,
not a city" [BENGEL].
He contrasts with the Jews, who serve an earthly
sanctuary, the Christians to whom the altar in heaven
stands open, while it is closed against the Jews. As Jesus
suffered without the gate, so spiritually must those who
desire to belong to Him, withdraw from the earthly
Jerusalem and its sanctuary, as from this world in
general. There is a reference to @Ex
33:7, when the tabernacle was moved without the
camp, which had become polluted by the people's
idolatry of the golden calves; so that "every one who
sought the Lord went out unto the tabernacle of the
congregation (as Moses called the tabernacle outside
the camp), which was without the camp"; a lively type of
what the Hebrews should do, namely, come out of the carnal
worship of the earthly Jerusalem to worship God in Christ
in spirit, and of what we all ought to do, namely, come
out from all carnalism, worldly formalism, and mere
sensuous worship, and know Jesus in His spiritual power
apart from worldliness, seeing that "we have no continuing
city" (@Heb
13:14).
bearing--as Simon of Cyrene did.
his reproach--the reproach which He bare, and
which all His people bear with Him.
14. here--on earth. Those
Hebrews who clung to the earthly sanctuary are
representatives of all who cling to this earth. The
earthly Jerusalem proved to be no "abiding city," having
been destroyed shortly after this Epistle was written, and
with it fell the Jewish civil and religious polity; a type
of the whole of our present earthly order of things soon
to perish.
one to come--(@Heb
2:5 11:10,14,16 12:22 Php 3:20).
15. As the "altar" was
mentioned in @Heb
13:10, so the "sacrifices" here (compare @1Pe
2:5, namely, praise and doing good, @Heb
13:16). Compare @Ps
119:108 Ro 12:1.
By him--as the Mediator of our prayers and
praises (@Joh
14:13,14); not by Jewish observances (@Ps
50:14,23 69:30,31 107:22 116:17). It was an old saying
of the rabbis, "At a future time all sacrifices shall
cease, but praises shall not cease."
of praise--for salvation.
continually--not merely at fixed seasons, as
those on which the legal sacrifices were offered, but
throughout all our lives.
fruit of our lips--(@Isa
57:19 Ho 14:2).
giving thanks--Greek, "confessing." BENGEL
remarks that the Hebrew, "todah," is
beautifully emphatic. It literally means "acknowledgment"
or "confession." In praising a creature, we may easily
exceed the truth; but in praising God we have only to go
on confessing what He really is to us. Hence it is
impossible to exceed the truth, and here is genuine
praise.
16. But--But the sacrifice
of praise with the lips (@Heb
13:15) is not enough; there must be also doing good
(beneficence) and communicating (that is, imparting a
share of your means, @Ga
6:6) to the needy.
with such--and not mere ritualistic
sacrifices.
17. Obey them that have the
rule over you--(Compare @Heb
13:7,24). This threefold mention of the rulers
is peculiar to this Epistle. In other Epistles Paul
includes the rulers in his exhortations. But here
the address is limited to the general body of the
Church, in contrast to the rulers to whom they
are charged to yield reverent submission. Now this is just
what might be expected when the apostle of the Gentiles
was writing to the Palestine Christians, among whom James
and the eleven apostles had exercised a more immediate
authority. It was important he should not seem to set
himself in opposition to their guides, but rather
strengthen their hands; he claims no authority directly or
indirectly over these rulers themselves [BIRKS].
"Remember" your deceased rulers (@Heb
13:7). "Obey" your living rulers; nay, more, not only
obey in cases where no sacrifice of self is
required, and where you are persuaded they are
right (so the Greek, for "obey"), but "submit
yourselves" as a matter of dutiful yielding, when
your judgment and natural will incline you in an opposite
direction.
they--on their part; so the Greek. As
they do their part, so do you yours. So Paul exhorts, @1Th
5:12,13.
watch--"are vigilant" (Greek).
for--Greek, "in behalf of."
must give account--The strongest stimulus to
watchfulness (@Mr
13:34-37). CHRYSOSTOM
was deeply struck with these words, as he tells us [On
the Priesthood, 6], "The fear of this threat
continually agitates my soul."
do it--"watch for your soul's eternal
salvation." It is a perilous responsibility for a man to
have to give account for others' deeds, who is not
sufficient for his own [ESTIUS,
from AQUINAS].
I wonder whether it be possible that any of the rulers
should be saved [CHRYSOSTOM].
Compare Paul's address to the elders, @Ac
20:28 1Co 4:1-5, where also he connects ministers'
responsibility with the account to be hereafter given
(compare @1Pe
5:4).
with joy--at your obedience; anticipating,
too, that you shall be their "joy" in the day of giving
account (@Php
4:1).
not with grief--at your disobedience;
apprehending also that in the day of account you may be
among the lost, instead of being their crown of rejoicing.
In giving account, the stewards are liable to blame if
aught be lost to the Master. "Mitigate their toil by every
office of attention and respect, that with alacrity,
rather than with grief, they may fulfil their duty,
arduous enough in itself, even though no unpleasantness be
added on your part" [GROTIUS].
that--Grief in your pastors is
unprofitable for you, for it weakens their spiritual
power; nay, more, "the groans (so the Greek
for 'grief') of other creatures are heard; how much more
of pastors!" [BENGEL].
So God will be provoked to avenge on you their "groaning"
(Greek). If they must render God an account of
their negligence, so must you for your ingratitude to them
[GROTIUS].
18. Pray for us--Paul
usually requests the Church's intercessions for him in
closing his Epistles, just as he begins with assuring them
of his having them at heart in his prayers (but in this
Epistle not till @Heb
13:20,21), @Ro
15:30. "Us," includes both himself and his companions;
he passes to himself alone, @Heb
13:19.
we trust we have a good conscience--in spite
of your former jealousies, and the charges of my Jewish
enemies at Jerusalem, which have been the occasion of my
imprisonment at Rome. In refutation of the Jews'
aspersions, he asserts in the same language as here his
own conscientiousness before God and man, @Ac
23:1-3 24:16,20,21 (wherein he virtually implies that
his reply to Ananias was not sinful impatience; for,
indeed, it was a prophecy which he was inspired at the
moment to utter, and which was fulfilled soon after).
we trust--Greek, "we are persuaded,"
in the oldest manuscripts. Good conscience produces
confidence, where the Holy Spirit rules the conscience (@Ro
9:1).
honestly--"in a good way." The same
Greek word as "good conscience." Literally,
"rightly," "becomingly."
19. the rather--Greek,
"I the more abundantly beseech you."
to do this--to pray for me.
that I may be restored to you--(@Phm
1:22). It is here first in the letter he mentions
himself, in a way so unobtrusive, as not to prejudice his
Hebrew readers against him, which would have been the
result had he commenced this as his other Epistles, with
authoritatively announcing his name and apostolic
commission.
20. Concluding prayer.
God of peace--So Paul, @Ro
15:33 16:20 2Co 13:11 Php 4:9 1Th 5:23 2Th 3:16. The
Judaizing of the Hebrews was calculated to sow seeds of
discord among them, of disobedience to their pastors (@Heb
13:17), and of alienation towards Paul. The God of
peace by giving unity of true doctrine, will unite
them in mutual love.
brought again from the dead--Greek,
"brought up," &c.: God brought the Shepherd; the Shepherd
shall bring the flock. Here only in the Epistle he
mentions the resurrection. He would not conclude without
mentioning 'the connecting link between the two truths
mainly discussed; the one perfect sacrifice and the
continual priestly intercession--the depth of His
humiliation and the height of His glory--the "altar" of
the cross and the ascension to the heavenly Holy of
Holies.
Lord Jesus--the title marking His person
and His Lordship over us. But @Heb
13:21, "through Jesus Christ." His office,
as the Anointed of the Spirit, making Him the
medium of communicating the Spirit to us, the holy unction
flowing down from the Head on the members (compare @Ac
2:36).
great--(@Heb
4:14).
shepherd of the sheep--A title familiar to
his Hebrew readers, from their Old Testament (@Isa
63:11; Septuagint): primarily Moses,
antitypically Christ: already compared together, @Heb
3:2-7. The transition is natural from their earthly
pastors (@Heb
13:17), to the Chief Pastor, as in @1Pe
5:1-4. Compare @Eze
34:23 and Jesus' own words, @Joh
10:2,11,14.
through the blood--Greek, "in," in
virtue of the blood (@Heb
2:9); it was because of His bloody death for us, that
the Father raised and crowned Him with glory. The "blood"
was the seal of the everlasting covenant entered into
between the Father and Son; in virtue of the Son's
blood, first Christ was raised, then Christ's people
shall be so (@Zec
9:11, seemingly referred to here; @Ac
20:28).
everlasting--The everlastingness of
the covenant necessitated the resurrection. This
clause, "the blood of the everlasting covenant," is a
summary retrospect of the Epistle (compare @Heb
9:12).
21. Make you perfect--properly
said of healing a rent; join you together in perfect
harmony [BENGEL].
to do his will, working in you--(@Heb
10:36); rather as Greek, "doing in you."
Whatever good we do, God does in us.
well-pleasing in his sight--(@Isa
53:10 Eph 5:10).
through Jesus Christ--"God doing
(working) in you that . . . through Jesus Christ"
(@Php
1:11).
to whom--to Christ. He closes as he began (@Heb
1:1-14), with giving glory to Christ.
22. suffer the word--The
Hebrews not being the section of the Church assigned to
Paul (but the Gentiles), he uses gentle entreaty, rather
than authoritative command.
few words--compared with what might be said
on so important a subject. Few, in an Epistle which
is more of a treatise than an Epistle (compare @1Pe
5:12). On the seeming inconsistency with @Ga
6:11, compare Note, see on Ga 6:11.
23. our brother Timothy--So
Paul, @1Co
4:17 2Co 1:1 Col 1:1 1Th 3:2.
is set at liberty--from prison. So
Aristarchus was imprisoned with Paul. BIRKS
translates, "dismissed," "sent away," namely, on a mission
to Greece, as Paul promised (@Php
2:19). However, some kind of previous detention
is implied before his being let go to Philippi.
Paul, though now at large, was still in Italy,
whence he sends the salutations of Italian Christians (@Heb
13:24), waiting for Timothy to join him, so as to
start for Jerusalem: we know from @1Ti
1:3, he and Timothy were together at Ephesus after his
departing from Italy eastward. He probably left Timothy
there and went to Philippi as he had promised. Paul
implies that if Timothy shall not come shortly, he
will start on his journey to the Hebrews at once.
24. all--The Scriptures are
intended for all, young and old, not merely for
ministers. Compare the different classes addressed,
"wives," @Eph
5:22; little children, @1Jo
2:18; "all," @1Pe
3:8 5:5. He says here "all," for the Hebrews whom he
addresses were not all in one place, though the Jerusalem
Hebrews are chiefly addressed.
They of Italy--not merely the brethren at
Rome, but of other places in Italy.
25. Paul's
characteristic salutation in every one of his other
thirteen Epistles, as he says himself, @1Co
16:21,23 Col 4:18 2Th 3:17. It is found in no Epistle
written by any other apostle in Paul's lifetime. It is
used in @Re
22:21, written subsequently, and in CLEMENT
OF ROME.
Being known to be his badge, it is not used by others in
his lifetime. The Greek here is, "The grace
(namely, of our Lord Jesus Christ) be with you all."
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