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THE EPISTLE OF
PAUL THE APOSTLE TO THE
HEBREWS
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
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CHAPTER 5
@Heb
5:1-14. CHRIST'S HIGH PRIESTHOOD; NEEDED QUALIFICATIONS;
MUST BE A MAN; MUST NOT HAVE ASSUMED THE DIGNITY HIMSELF,
BUT HAVE BEEN APPOINTED BY GOD; THEIR LOW SPIRITUAL
PERCEPTIONS A BAR TO PAUL'S SAYING ALL HE MIGHT ON CHRIST'S
MELCHISEDEC-LIKE PRIESTHOOD.
1. For--substantiating @Heb
4:15.
every--that is, every
legitimate high priest; for instance, the Levitical, as he
is addressing Hebrews, among whom the Levitical priesthood
was established as the legitimate one. Whatever, reasons
Paul, is excellent in the Levitical priests, is also in
Christ, and besides excellencies which are not in the
Levitical priests.
taken from among men--not
from among angels, who could not have a fellow feeling with
us men. This qualification Christ has, as being, like the
Levitical priest, a man (@Heb
2:14,16). Being "from men," He can be
"for (that is, in behalf of, for the good of)
men."
ordained--Greek,
"constituted," "appointed."
both gifts--to be
joined with "for sins," as "sacrifices"
is (the "both . . . and" requires this);
therefore not the Hebrew, "mincha,"
"unbloody offerings," but animal whole burnt
offerings, spontaneously given.
"Sacrifices" are the animal sacrifices due
according to the legal ordinance [ESTIUS].
2. Who can--Greek, "being able"; not
pleasing himself (@Ro
15:3).
have compassion--Greek,
"estimate mildly," "feel leniently," or
"moderately towards"; "to make allowance
for"; not showing stern rigor save to the obstinate (@Heb
10:28).
ignorant--sins not
committed in resistance of light and knowledge, but as
Paul's past sin (@1Ti
1:13). No sacrifice was appointed for wilful sin
committed with a high hand; for such were to be punished
with death; all other sins, namely, ignorances and errors,
were confessed and expiated with sacrifices by the high
priest.
out of the way--not
deliberately and altogether wilfully erring, but deluded
through the fraud of Satan and their own carnal frailty and
thoughtlessness.
infirmity--moral
weakness which is sinful, and makes men capable of sin, and
so requires to be expiated by sacrifices. This kind of
"infirmity" Christ had not; He had the
"infirmity" of body whereby He was capable of
suffering and death.
3. by reason hereof--"on account of this"
infirmity.
he ought . . .
also for himself, to offer for sins--the Levitical
priest ought; in this our High Priest is superior to the
Levitical. The second "for" is a different Greek
term from the first; "in behalf of the people . . .
on account of sins."
4. no man--of any other family but Aaron's, according
to the Mosaic law, can take to himself the office of high
priest. This verse is quoted by some to prove the need of an
apostolic succession of ordination in the Christian
ministry; but the reference here is to the priesthood,
not the Christian ministry. The analogy in our
Christian dispensation would warn ministers, seeing that God
has separated them from the congregation of His people to
bring them near Himself, and to do the service of His house,
and to minister (as He separated the Levites, Korah with his
company), that content with this, they should beware of
assuming the sacrificial priesthood also, which belongs to
Christ alone. The sin of Korah was, not content with the
ministry as a Levite, he took the sacerdotal priesthood
also. No Christian minister, as such, is ever called Hiereus,
that is, sacrificing priest. All Christians, without
distinction, whether ministers or people, have a
metaphorical, not a literal, priesthood. The sacrifices
which they offer are spiritual, not literal, their bodies
and the fruit of their lips, praises continually (@Heb
13:15). Christ alone had a proper and true sacrifice to
offer. The law sacrifices were typical, not metaphorical, as
the Christian's, nor proper and true, as Christ's. In Roman
times the Mosaic restriction of the priesthood to Aaron's
family was violated.
5. glorified not himself--did not assume the glory of
the priestly office of Himself without the call of God (@Joh
8:54).
but he that said--that
is, the Father glorified Him or appointed Him to the
priesthood. This appointment was involved in, and was the
result of, the Sonship of Christ, which qualified Him
for it. None but the divine Son could have fulfilled such an
office (@Heb
10:5-9). The connection of Sonship and priesthood
is typified in the Hebrew title for priests
being given to David's sons (@2Sa
8:18). Christ did not constitute Himself the Son
of God, but was from everlasting the only-begotten of the
Father. On His Sonship depended His glorification, and
His being called of God (@Heb
5:10), as Priest.
6. He is here called simply "Priest"; in @Heb
5:5, "High Priest." He is a Priest
absolutely, because He stands alone in that character
without an equal. He is "High Priest" in respect
of the Aaronic type, and also in respect to us, whom He has
made priests by throwing open to us access to God [BENGEL].
"The order of Melchisedec" is explained in
@Heb
7:15, "the similitude of Melchisedec."
The priesthood is similarly combined with His kingly office
in @Zec
6:13. Melchisedec was at once man, priest, and king.
Paul's selecting as the type of Christ one not of the stock
of Abraham, on which the Jews prided themselves, is an
intimation of Messianic universalism.
7. in the days of his flesh--(@Heb
2:14 10:20). @Heb
5:7-10 state summarily the subject about to be handled
more fully in the seventh and eighth chapters.
when he had offered--rather,
"in that He offered." His crying and
tears were part of the experimental lesson of obedience
which He submitted to learn from the Father (when God was
qualifying Him for the high priesthood). "Who" is
to be construed with "learned obedience" (or
rather as Greek, "His obedience";
"the obedience" which we all know about).
This all shows that "Christ glorified not Himself to be
made an High Priest" (@Heb
5:5), but was appointed thereto by the Father.
prayers and supplications--Greek,
"both prayers and supplications." In
Gethsemane, where He prayed thrice, and on the cross,
where He cried, My God, my God . . . probably
repeating inwardly all the twenty-second Psalm.
"Prayers" refer to the mind:
"supplications" also to the body (namely, the
suppliant attitude) (@Mt
26:39) [BENGEL].
with strong crying and
tears--The "tears" are an additional fact here
communicated to us by the inspired apostle, not recorded in
the Gospels, though implied. @Mt
26:37, "sorrowful and very heavy." @Mr
14:33 Lu 22:44, "in an agony He prayed more
earnestly . . . His sweat . . . great
drops of blood falling down to the ground." @Ps
22:1 ("roaring . . . cry"), @Ps
22:2,19,21,24 69:3,10, "I wept."
able to save him from
death--@Mr
14:36, "All things are possible unto
Thee" (@Joh
12:27). His cry showed His entire participation of man's
infirmity: His reference of His wish to the will of God, His
sinless faith and obedience.
heard in that he feared--There
is no intimation in the twenty-second Psalm, or the Gospels
that Christ prayed to be saved from the mere act of dying.
What He feared was the hiding of the Father's countenance.
His holy filial love must rightly have shrunk from this
strange and bitterest of trials without the imputation of
impatience. To have been passively content at the approach
of such a cloud would have been, not faith, but sin. The cup
of death He prayed to be freed from was, not corporal, but
spiritual death, that is, the (temporary) separation of His
human soul from the light of God's countenance. His prayer
was "heard" in His Father's strengthening Him so
as to hold fast His unwavering faith under the trial (My
God, my God, was still His filial cry under it. still
claiming God as His, though God hid His face), and soon
removing it in answer to His cry during the darkness on the
cross, "My God, my God," &c. But see below a
further explanation of how He was heard. The Greek
literally, is, "Was heard from His fear,"
that is, so as to be saved from His fear. Compare @Ps
22:21, which well accords with this, "Save me from
the lion's mouth (His prayer): thou hast heard me from
the horns of the unicorns." Or what better accords with
the strict meaning of the Greek noun, "in
consequence of His REVERENTIAL FEAR," that is, in
that He shrank from the horrors of separation from
the bright presence of the Father, yet was reverentially
cautious by no thought or word of impatience to give way
to a shadow of distrust or want of perfect filial love. In
the same sense @Heb
12:28 uses the noun, and @Heb
11:7 the verb. ALFORD somewhat similarly translates,
"By reason of His reverent submission." I prefer
"reverent fear." The word in derivation
means the cautious handling of some precious, yet.
delicate vessel, which with ruder handling might easily be
broken [TRENCH]. This fully agrees with Jesus' spirit,
"If it be possible . . . nevertheless not
My will, but Thy will be done"; and with the
context, @Heb
5:5, "Glorified not Himself to be made an High
Priest," implying reverent fear: wherein it
appears He had the requisite for the office specified @Heb
5:4, "No man taketh this honor unto himself."
ALFORD well says, What is true in the Christian's life, that
what we ask from God, though He may not grant in the form we
wish, yet He grants in His own, and that a better form, does
not hold good in Christ's case; for Christ's real prayer,
"not My will, but Thine be done," in consistency
with His reverent fear towards the Father, was granted in
the very form in which it was expressed, not in another.
8. Though He WAS (so it ought to be translated: a
positive admitted fact: not a mere supposition as were
would imply) God's divine Son (whence, even in His agony, He
so lovingly and often cried, Father, @Mt
26:39), yet He learned His (so the Greek)
obedience, not from His Sonship, but from His sufferings. As
the Son, He was always obedient to the Father's will; but the
special obedience needed to qualify Him as our High Priest,
He learned experimentally in practical suffering. Compare @Php
2:6-8, "equal with God, but . . .
took upon Him the form of a servant, and became obedient
unto death," &c. He was obedient already
before His passion, but He stooped to a still more
humiliating and trying form of obedience then. The Greek
adage is, "Pathemata mathemata,"
"sufferings, disciplinings." Praying and obeying,
as in Christ's case, ought to go hand in hand.
9. made perfect--completed, brought to His goal of
learning and suffering through death (@Heb
2:10) [ALFORD], namely, at His glorious resurrection and
ascension.
author--Greek,
"cause."
eternal salvation--obtained
for us in the short "days of Jesus' flesh"
(@Heb
5:7; compare @Heb
5:6, "for ever," @Isa
45:17).
unto all . . .
that obey him--As Christ obeyed the Father, so
must we obey Him by faith.
10. Greek, rather, "Addressed by
God (by the appellation) High Priest." Being formally
recognized by God as High Priest at the time of His being
"made perfect" (@Heb
5:9). He was High Priest already in the purpose of
God before His passion; but after it, when perfected, He
was formally addressed so.
11. Here he digresses to complain of the low
spiritual attainments of the Palestinian Christians and to
warn them of the danger of falling from light once enjoyed;
at the same time encouraging them by God's faithfulness to
persevere. At @Heb
6:20 he resumes the comparison of Christ to Melchisedec.
hard to be uttered--rather
as Greek, "hard of interpretation to
speak." Hard for me to state intelligibly to you owing
to your dulness about spiritual things. Hence, instead of saying
many things, he writes in comparatively few words
(@Heb
13:22). In the "we," Paul, as usual, includes
Timothy with himself in addressing them.
ye are--Greek,
"ye have become dull" (the Greek, by
derivation, means hard to move): this implies that once,
when first "enlightened," they were earnest and
zealous, but had become dull. That the Hebrew
believers AT JERUSALEM were dull in spiritual things, and
legal in spirit, appears from @Ac
21:20-24, where James and the elders expressly say of
the "thousands of Jews which believe," that
"they are all zealous of the law"; this was
at Paul's last visit to Jerusalem, after which this Epistle
seems to have been written (see on Heb 5:12, on "for
the time").
12. for the time--considering the long time that you
have been Christians. Therefore this Epistle was not one of
those written early.
which be the first
principles--Greek, "the rudiments of the
beginning of." A Pauline phrase (see on Ga 4:3; Ga
4:9). Ye need not only to be taught the first elements,
but also "which they be." They are
therefore enumerated @Heb
6:1,2 [BENGEL]. ALFORD translates, "That someone
teach you the rudiments"; but the position of the Greek,
"tina," inclines me to take it
interrogatively, "which," as English Version,
Syriac, Vulgate, &c.
of the oracles of God--namely,
of the Old Testament: instead of seeing Christ as the end of
the Old Testament Scripture, they were relapsing towards
Judaism, so as not only not to be capable of understanding
the typical reference to Christ of such an Old Testament
personage as Melchisedec, but even much more elementary
references.
are become--through
indolence.
milk . . . not . . .
strong meat--"Milk" refers to such fundamental
first principles as he enumerates in @Heb
6:1,2. The solid meat, or food, is not
absolutely necessary for preserving life, but is so for
acquiring greater strength. Especially in the case of the
Hebrews, who were much given to allegorical interpretations
of their law, which they so much venerated, the application
of the Old Testament types, to Christ and His High
Priesthood, was calculated much to strengthen them in the
Christian faith [LIMBORCH].
13. useth--Greek, "partaketh," that
is, taketh as his portion. Even strong men partake of
milk, but do not make milk their chief, much less their
sole, diet.
the word of righteousness--the
Gospel wherein "the righteousness of God is revealed
from faith to faith" (@Ro
1:17), and which is called "the ministration of
righteousness" (@2Co
3:9). This includes the doctrine of justification
and sanctification: the first principles, as well as
the perfection, of the doctrine of Christ: the nature
of the offices and person of Christ as the true Melchisedec,
that is, "King of righteousness" (compare @Mt
3:15).
14. strong meat--"solid food."
them . . . of
full age--literally, "perfect": akin to
"perfection" (@Heb
6:1).
by reason of use--Greek,
"habit."
senses--organs of
sense.
exercised--similarly
connected with "righteousness" in @Heb
12:11.
to discern both good and
evil--as a child no longer an infant (@Isa
7:16): so able to distinguish between sound and unsound
doctrine. The mere child puts into its mouth things hurtful
and things nutritious, without discrimination: but not so
the adult. Paul again alludes to their tendency not to
discriminate, but to be carried about by strange doctrines,
in @Heb
13:9.
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