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THE EPISTLE OF
PAUL THE APOSTLE TO THE
HEBREWS
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
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CHAPTER 4
@Heb
4:1-16. THE PROMISE OF GOD'S REST IS FULLY REALIZED
THROUGH CHRIST: LET US STRIVE TO OBTAIN IT BY HIM, OUR
SYMPATHIZING HIGH PRIEST.
1. Let us . . . fear--not with slavish
terror, but godly "fear and trembling" (@Php
2:12). Since so many have fallen, we have cause to fear
(@Heb
3:17-19).
being left us--still remaining
to us after the others have, by neglect, lost it.
his rest--God's
heavenly rest, of which Canaan is the type.
"To-day" still continues, during which there is
the danger of failing to reach the rest.
"To-day," rightly used, terminates in the rest
which, when once obtained, is never lost (@Re
3:12). A foretaste of the rest Is given in the inward
rest which the believer's soul has in Christ.
should seem to come short
of it--Greek, "to have come short of
it"; should be found, when the great trial of
all shall take place [ALFORD], to have fallen short of
attaining the promise. The word "seem" is a
mitigating mode of expression, though not lessening the
reality. BENGEL and OWEN take it, Lest there should be any semblance
or appearance of falling short.
2. gospel preached . . . unto them--in
type: the earthly Canaan, wherein they failed to realize
perfect rest, suggesting to them that they should look
beyond to the heavenly land of rest, to which faith
is the avenue, and from which unbelief excludes, as
it did from the earthly Canaan.
the word preached--literally,
"the word of hearing": the word heard by them.
not being mixed with faith
in them that heard--So the Syriac and the Old
Latin Versions, older than any of our manuscripts, and
LUCIFER, read, "As the world did not unite with the
hearers in faith." The word heard being the food which,
as the bread of life, must pass into flesh and blood through
man's appropriating it to himself in faith. Hearing alone is
of as little value as undigested food in a bad stomach [THOLUCK].
The whole of oldest extant manuscript authority
supports a different reading, "unmingled as they
were (Greek accusative case agreeing with 'them') in
faith with its hearers," that is, with its believing,
obedient hearers, as Caleb and Joshua. So
"hear" is used for "obey" in the
context, @Heb
4:7, "To-day, if ye will hear His voice." The
disobedient, instead of being blended in "the same
body," separated themselves as Korah: a tacit reproof
to like separatists from the Christian assembling together
(@Heb
10:25 Jude 1:19).
3. For--justifying his assertion of the need of
"faith," @Heb
4:2.
we which have believed--we
who at Christ's coming shall be found to have believed.
do enter--that is, are
to enter: so two of the oldest manuscripts and LUCIFER and
the old Latin. Two other oldest manuscripts read,
"Let us enter."
into rest--Greek,
"into the rest" which is promised in the
ninety-fifth Psalm.
as he said--God's
saying that unbelief excludes from entrance implies
that belief gains an entrance into the rest. What,
however, Paul mainly here dwells on in the quotation is that
the promised "rest" has not yet been
entered into. At @Heb
4:11 he again, as in @Heb
3:12-19 already, takes up faith as the
indispensable qualification for entering it.
although,
&c.--Although God had finished His works of creation and
entered on His rest from creation long before Moses'
time, yet under that leader of Israel another rest was
promised, which most fell short of through unbelief; and
although the rest in Canaan was subsequently attained under
Joshua, yet long after, in David's days, God, in the
ninety-fifth Psalm, still speaks of the rest of God
as not yet attained. THEREFORE, there must be meant a rest still
future, namely, that which "remaineth for the
people of God" in heaven, @Heb
4:3-9, when they shall rest from their works, as God did
from His, @Heb
4:10. The argument is to show that by "My
rest," God means a future rest, not for Himself,
but for us.
finished--Greek,
"brought into existence," "made."
4. he spake--God (@Ge
2:2).
God did rest the seventh
day--a rest not ending with the seventh day, but
beginning then and still continuing, into which believers
shall hereafter enter. God's rest is not a rest necessitated
by fatigue, nor consisting in idleness, but is that
upholding and governing of which creation was the beginning
[ALFORD]. Hence Moses records the end of each of the first
six days, but not of the seventh.
from all his works--Hebrew,
@Ge
2:2, "from all His work." God's
"work" was one, comprehending, however,
many "works."
5. in this place--In this passage of the Psalm again,
it is implied that the rest was even then still future.
6. it remaineth--still to be realized.
some must enter--The
denial of entrance to unbelievers is a virtual promise of
entrance to those that believe. God wishes not His rest to
be empty, but furnished with guests (@Lu
14:23).
they to whom it was first
preached entered not--literally, "they who first
(in the time of Moses) had the Gospel preached to
them," namely, in type, see on Heb 4:2.
unbelief--Greek,
rather "disobedience" (see on Heb 3:18).
7. Again--Anew the promise recurs. Translate
as the Greek order is, "He limited a certain
day, 'To-day.'" Here Paul interrupts the quotation by,
"In (the Psalm of) David saying after so long a time
(after five hundred years' possession of Canaan)," and
resumes it by, "as it has been said before
(so the Greek oldest manuscript, before,
namely, @Heb
3:7,15), To-day if ye hear His voice," &c.
[ALFORD].
8. Answer to the objection which might be made to his
reasoning, namely, that those brought into Canaan by Joshua
(so "Jesus" here means, as in @Ac
7:45) did enter the rest of God. If the rest of
God meant Canaan, God would not after their entrance into
that land, have spoken (or speak [ALFORD]) of another
(future) day of entering the rest.
9. therefore--because God "speaks of another
day" (see on Heb 4:8).
remaineth--still to be
realized hereafter by the "some (who) must enter
therein" (@Heb
4:6), that is, "the people of God," the true
Israel who shall enter into God's rest ("My
rest," @Heb
4:3). God's rest was a Sabbatism; so also will ours be.
a rest--Greek,
"Sabbatism." In time there are many Sabbaths, but
then there shall be the enjoyment and keeping of a
Sabbath-rest: one perfect and eternal. The "rest"
in @Heb
4:8 is Greek, "catapausis;" Hebrew,
"Noah"; rest from weariness, as the ark
rested on Ararat after its tossings to and fro; and as
Israel, under Joshua, enjoyed at last rest from war in
Canaan. But the "rest" in this @Heb
4:9 is the nobler and more exalted (Hebrew)
"Sabbath" rest; literally,
"cessation": rest from work when finished
(@Heb
4:4), as God rested (@Re
16:17). The two ideas of "rest" combined, give
the perfect view of the heavenly Sabbath. Rest from
weariness, sorrow, and sin; and rest in the completion of
God's new creation (@Re
21:5). The whole renovated creation shall share in it;
nothing will there be to break the Sabbath of eternity; and
the Triune God shall rejoice in the work of His hands (@Zep
3:17). Moses, the representative of the law, could not
lead Israel into Canaan: the law leads us to Christ, and
there its office ceases, as that of Moses on the borders of
Canaan: it is Jesus, the antitype of Joshua, who leads us
into the heavenly rest. This verse indirectly establishes
the obligation of the Sabbath still; for the type continues
until the antitype supersedes it: so legal sacrifices
continued till the great antitypical Sacrifice superseded
it, As then the antitypical heavenly Sabbath-rest will not
be till Christ, our Gospel Joshua, comes, to usher us into
it, the typical earthly Sabbath must continue till then. The
Jews call the future rest "the day which is all
Sabbath."
10. For--justifying and explaining the word
"rest," or "Sabbatism," just used (see
on Heb 4:9).
he that is entered--whosoever
once enters.
his rest--God's
rest: the rest prepared by God for His people [ESTIUS].
Rather, "His rest": the man's rest:
that assigned to him by God as his. The Greek
is the same as that for "his own" immediately
after.
hath ceased--The Greek
aorist is used of indefinite time, "is wont to
cease," or rather, "rest": rests. The
past tense implies at the same time the certainty of
it, as also that in this life a kind of foretaste in Christ
is already given [GROTIUS] (@Jer
6:16 Mt 11:28,29). Our highest happiness shall,
according to this verse, consist in our being united in one
with God, and moulded into conformity with Him as our
archetype [CALVIN].
from his own works--even
from those that were good and suitable to the time of doing
work. Labor was followed by rest even in Paradise (@Ge
2:3,15). The work and subsequent rest of God are the
archetype to which we should be conformed. The argument is:
He who once enters rest, rests from labors; but God's people
have not yet rested from them, therefore they have not yet
entered the rest, and so it must be still future. ALFORD
translates, "He that entered into his (or else God's,
but rather 'his'; @Isa
11:10, 'His rest': 'the joy of the Lord,' @Mt
25:21,23) rest (namely, Jesus, our Forerunner, @Heb
4:14 6:20, 'The Son of God that is passed through the
heavens': in contrast to Joshua the type, who did not
bring God's people into the heavenly rest), he himself
(emphatical) rested from his works (@Heb
4:4), as God (did) from His own" (so the Greek,
"works"). The argument, though generally applying
to anyone who has entered his rest, probably alludes
to Jesus in particular, the antitypical Joshua, who, having
entered His rest at the Ascension, has ceased or rested from
His work of the new creation, as God on the seventh day
rested from the work of physical creation. Not that He has
ceased to carry on the work of redemption, nay, He upholds
it by His mediation; but He has ceased from those portions
of the work which constitute the foundation; the sacrifice
has been once for all accomplished. Compare as to God's
creation rest, once for all completed, and rested from. but
now still upheld (see on Heb 4:4).
11. Let us . . . therefore--Seeing such a
promise is before us, which we may, like them, fall short of
through unbelief.
labour--Greek,
"strive diligently."
that rest--which is
still future and so glorious. Or, in ALFORD'S translation of
@Heb
4:10, "That rest into which Christ has
entered before" (@Heb
4:14 Heb 6:20).
fall--with the soul,
not merely the body, as the rebel Israelites fell (@Heb
3:17).
after the same example--ALFORD
translates, "fall into the same example."
The less prominent place of the "fall" in the Greek
favors this. The sense is, "lest any fall into such disobedience
(so the Greek for 'unbelief' means) as they gave a
sample of" [GROTIUS]. The Jews say, "The parents
are a sign (warning) to their sons."
12. For--Such diligent striving (@Heb
4:11) is incumbent on us FOR we have to do with a God
whose "word" whereby we shall be judged, is
heart-searching, and whose eyes are all-seeing (@Heb
4:13). The qualities here attributed to the word of
God, and the whole context, show that it is regarded in
its JUDICIAL power, whereby it doomed the disobedient
Israelites to exclusion from Canaan, and shall exclude
unbelieving so-called Christians from the heavenly rest. The
written Word of God is not the prominent thought here,
though the passage is often quoted as if it were. Still the
word of God (the same as that preached, @Heb
4:2), used here in the broadest sense, but with special
reference to its judicial power, INCLUDES the Word of
God, the sword of the Spirit with double edge, one edge for
convicting and converting some (@Heb
4:2), and the other for condemning and destroying the
unbelieving (@Heb
4:14). @Re
19:15 similarly represents the Word's judicial power as
a sharp sword going out of Christ's mouth to smite
the nations. The same word which is saving to the faithful
(@Heb
4:2) is destroying to the disobedient (@2Co
2:15,16). The personal Word, to whom some refer the
passage, is not here meant: for He is not the sword,
but has the sword. Thus reference to Joshua
appropriately follows in @Heb
4:8.
quick--Greek,
"living"; having living power, as "the rod of
the mouth and the breath of the lips" of "the
living God."
powerful--Greek,
"energetic"; not only living, but energetically
efficacious.
sharper--"more
cutting."
two-edged--sharpened
at both edge and back. Compare "sword of the Spirit
. . . word of God" (@Eph
6:17). Its double power seems to be implied by
its being "two-edged." "It judges all that is
in the heart, for there it passes through, at once punishing
[unbelievers] and searching [both believers and
unbelievers]" [CHRYSOSTOM]. PHILO similarly speaks of
"God passing between the parts of Abraham's sacrifices
(@Ge
15:17, where, however, it is a 'burning lamp' that
passed between the pieces) with His word, which is the
cutter of all things: which sword, being sharpened to the
utmost keenness, never ceases to divide all sensible things,
and even things not perceptible to sense or physically
divisible, but perceptible and divisible by the word."
Paul's early training, both in the Greek schools of
Tarsus and the Hebrew schools at Jerusalem, accounts fully
for his acquaintance with Philo's modes of thought, which
were sure to be current among learned Jews everywhere,
though Philo himself belonged to Alexandria, not Jerusalem.
Addressing Jews, he by the Spirit sanctions what was true in
their current literature, as he similarly did in addressing
Gentiles (@Ac
17:28).
piercing--Greek,
"coming through."
even to the dividing
asunder of soul and spirit--that is, reaching through
even to the separation of the animal soul, the lower
part of man's incorporeal nature, the seat of animal
desires, which he has in common with the brutes; compare the
same Greek, @1Co
2:14, "the natural [animal-souled] man" (@Jude
1:19), from the spirit (the higher part of man,
receptive of the Spirit of God, and allying him to heavenly
beings).
and of the joints and
marrow--rather, "(reaching even TO) both
the joints (so as to divide them) and marrow." Christ
"knows what is in man" (@Joh
2:25): so His word reaches as far as to the most
intimate and accurate knowledge of man's most hidden parts,
feelings, and thoughts, dividing, that is, distinguishing
what is spiritual from what is carnal and animal
in him, the spirit from the soul: so @Pr
20:27. As the knife of the Levitical priest reached to
dividing parts, closely united as the joints of the
limbs, and penetrated to the innermost parts, as the marrows
(the Greek is plural); so the word of God
divides the closely joined parts of man's immaterial being,
soul and spirit, and penetrates to the innermost parts of
the spirit. The clause (reaching even to) "both
the joints and marrow" is subordinate to the clause,
"even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit."
(In the oldest manuscripts as in English Version,
there is no "both," as there is in the clause
"both the joints and . . .
which marks the latter to be subordinate). An image
(appropriate in addressing Jews) from the literal dividing
of joints, and penetrating to, so as to open out, the
marrow, by the priest's knife, illustrating the previously
mentioned spiritual "dividing of soul from
spirit," whereby each (soul as well as spirit) is laid
bare and "naked" before God; this view accords
with @Heb
4:13. Evidently "the dividing of the soul from the
spirit" answers to the "joints" which the
sword, when it reaches unto, divides asunder, as
the "spirit" answers to the innermost
"marrow." "Moses forms the soul, Christ the
spirit. The soul draws with it the body; the spirit draws
with it both soul and body." ALFORD'S interpretation is
clumsy, by which he makes the soul itself, and the
spirit itself, to be divided, instead of the soul from
the spirit: so also he makes not only the joints to
be divided asunder, but the marrow also to be divided
(?). The Word's dividing and far penetrating power has both
a punitive and a healing effect.
discerner of the thoughts--Greek,
"capable of judging the purposes."
intents--rather,
"conceptions" [CRELLIUS]; "ideas"
[ALFORD]. AS the Greek for "thoughts"
refers to the mind and feelings, so that for
"intents," or rather "mental
conceptions," refers to the intellect.
13. creature--visible or invisible.
in his sight--in God's
sight (@Heb
4:12). "God's wisdom, simply manifold, and
uniformly multiform, with incomprehensible comprehension,
comprehends all things incomprehensible."
opened--literally,
"thrown on the back so as to have the neck laid
bare," as a victim with neck exposed for sacrifice. The
Greek perfect tense implies that this is our continuous
state in relation to God. "Show, O man, shame
and fear towards thy God, for no veil, no twisting,
bending, coloring, or disguise, can cover unbelief"
(Greek, 'disobedience,' @Heb
4:11). Let us, therefore, earnestly labor to enter the
rest lest any fall through practical unbelief (@Heb
4:11).
14. Seeing then--Having, therefore; resuming @Heb
2:17.
great--as being
"the Son of God, higher than the heavens" (@Heb
7:26): the archetype and antitype of the legal high
priest.
passed into the heavens--rather,
"passed through the heavens," namely, those
which come between us and God, the aerial heaven, and that
above the latter containing the heavenly bodies, the sun,
moon, &c. These heavens were the veil which our High
Priest passed through into the heaven of heavens, the
immediate presence of God, just as the Levitical high priest
passed through the veil into the Holy of Holies. Neither
Moses, nor even Joshua, could bring us into this rest, but
Jesus, as our Forerunner, already spiritually, and hereafter
in actual presence, body, soul, and spirit, brings His
people into the heavenly rest.
Jesus--the antitypical
Joshua (@Heb
4:8).
hold fast--the
opposite of "let slip" (@Heb
2:1); and "fall away" (@Heb
6:6). As the genitive follows, the literally,
sense is, "Let us take hold of our
profession," that is, of the faith and hope which are
subjects of our profession and confession. The accusative
follows when the sense is "hold fast" [TITTMANN].
15. For--the motive to "holding our
profession" (@Heb
4:14), namely the sympathy and help we may expect from
our High Priest. Though "great" (@Heb
4:14), He is not above caring for us; nay, as being in
all points one with us as to manhood, sin only excepted, He
sympathizes with us in every temptation. Though exalted to
the highest heavens, He has changed His place, not His
nature and office in relation to us, His condition, but not
His affection. Compare @Mt
26:38, "watch with me": showing His desire in
the days of His flesh for the sympathy of those whom He
loved: so He now gives His suffering people His
sympathy. Compare Aaron, the type, bearing the names of
the twelve tribes in the breastplate of judgment on his
heart, when he entered into the holy place, for a memorial
before the Lord continually (@Ex
28:29).
cannot be touched with the
feeling of--Greek, "cannot sympathize with
our infirmities": our weaknesses, physical and
moral (not sin, but liability to its assaults). He, though
sinless, can sympathize with us sinners; His understanding
more acutely perceived the forms of temptation than we who
are weak can; His will repelled them as instantaneously as
the fire does the drop of water cast into it. He, therefore,
experimentally knew what power was needed to overcome
temptations. He is capable of sympathizing, for He was at
the same time tempted without sin, and yet truly tempted [BENGEL].
In Him alone we have an example suited to men of every
character and under all circumstances. In sympathy He adapts
himself to each, as if He had not merely taken on Him man's
nature in general, but also the peculiar nature of that
single individual.
but--"nay,
rather, He was (one) tempted" [ALFORD].
like as we are--Greek,
"according to (our) similitude."
without sin--Greek,
"choris," "separate from
sin" (@Heb
7:26). If the Greek "aneu" had
been used, sin would have been regarded as the object
absent from Christ the subject; but choris here
implies that Christ, the subject, is regarded as
separated from sin the object [TITTMANN]. Thus, throughout
His temptations in their origin, process, and result, sin
had nothing in Him; He was apart and separate from it
[ALFORD].
16. come--rather as Greek,
"approach," "draw near."
boldly--Greek,
"with confidence," or "freedom of
speech" (@Eph
6:19).
the throne of grace--God's
throne is become to us a throne of grace through the
mediation of our High Priest at God's right hand (@Heb
8:1 12:2). Pleading our High Priest Jesus' meritorious
death, we shall always find God on a throne of grace.
Contrast Job's complaint (@Job
23:3-8) and Elihu's "IF," &c. (@Job
33:23-28).
obtain--rather,
"receive."
mercy--"Compassion,"
by its derivation (literally, fellow feeling from community
of suffering), corresponds to the character of our
High Priest "touched with the feeling of our
infirmities" (@Heb
4:15).
find grace--corresponding
to "throne of grace." Mercy
especially refers to the remission and removal of sins; grace,
to the saving bestowal of spiritual gifts [ESTIUS]. Compare
"Come unto Me . . . and I will give
you rest (the rest received on first believing). Take
My yoke on you . . . and ye shall find rest
(the continuing rest and peace found in daily
submitting to Christ's easy yoke; the former answers to
"receive mercy" here; the latter, to "find
grace," @Mt
11:28,29).
in time of need--Greek,
"seasonably." Before we are overwhelmed by the
temptation; when we most need it, in temptations and
persecutions; such as is suitable to the time, persons, and
end designed (@Ps
104:27). A supply of grace is in store for believers
against all exigencies; but they are only supplied with it
according as the need arises. Compare "in due
time," @Ro
5:6. Not, as ALFORD explains, "help in time,"
that is, to-day, while it is yet open to us; the
accepted time (@2Co
6:2).
help--Compare @Heb
2:18, "He is able to succor them that are
tempted."
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