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THE EPISTLE OF
PAUL THE APOSTLE TO THE
HEBREWS
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
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CHAPTER 6
@Heb
6:1-14. WARNING AGAINST
RETROGRADING,
WHICH SOON
LEADS TO APOSTASY;
ENCOURAGEMENT TO
STEADFASTNESS FROM
GOD'S FAITHFULNESS
TO HIS
WORD AND OATH.
1. Therefore--Wherefore:
seeing that ye ought not now to be still "babes" (@Heb
5:11-14).
leaving--getting further forward than the
elementary "principles." "As in building a house one must
never leave the foundation: yet to be always laboring in
'laying the foundation' would be ridiculous" [CALVIN].
the principles of the doctrine--Greek,
"the word of the beginning," that is, the
discussion of the "first principles of Christianity (@Heb
5:12).
let us go on--Greek, "let us be borne
forward," or "bear ourselves forward"; implying active
exertion: press on. Paul, in teaching, here classifies
himself with the Hebrew readers, or (as they ought to be)
learners, and says, Let us together press forward.
perfection--the matured knowledge of those
who are "of full age" (@Heb
5:14) in Christian attainments.
foundation of--that is, consisting in
"repentance."
repentance from dead works--namely, not
springing from the vital principle of faith and
love toward God, and so counted, like their doer, dead
before God. This repentance from dead works is
therefore paired with "faith toward God." The three pairs
of truths enumerated are designedly such as JEWISH
believers might in some degree have known from the Old
Testament, but had been taught more clearly when they
became Christians. This accounts for the omission of
distinct specification of some essential first
principle of Christian truth. Hence, too, he mentions
"faith toward God," and not explicitly faith
toward Christ (though of course included).
Repentance and faith were the first principles taught
under the Gospel.
2. the doctrine of baptisms--paired
with "laying on of hands," as the latter followed on
Christian baptism, and answers to the rite of
confirmation in Episcopal churches. Jewish believers
passed, by an easy transition, from Jewish baptismal
purifications (@Heb
9:10, "washings"), baptism of proselytes, and John's
baptism, and legal imposition of hands, to their Christian
analogues, baptism, and the subsequent laying on
of hands, accompanied by the gift of the Holy Ghost
(compare @Heb
6:4). Greek, "baptismoi," plural,
including Jewish and Christian baptisms, are
to be distinguished from baptisma, singular,
restricted to Christian baptism. The six particulars
here specified had been, as it were, the Christian
Catechism of the Old Testament; and such Jews who had
begun to recognize Jesus as the Christ immediately on the
new light being shed on these fundamental particulars,
were accounted as having the elementary principles
of the doctrine of Christ [BENGEL].
The first and most obvious elementary instruction of Jews
would be the teaching them the typical significance
of their own ceremonial law in its Christian fulfilment [ALFORD].
resurrection, &c.--held already by the Jews
from the Old Testament: confirmed with clearer light in
Christian teaching or "doctrine."
eternal judgment--judgment fraught with
eternal consequences either of joy or of woe.
3. will we do--So some of
the oldest manuscripts read; but others, "Let us do."
"This," that is, "Go on unto perfection."
if God permit--For even in the case of good
resolutions, we cannot carry them into effect, save
through God "working in us both to will and to do of His
good pleasure" (@Php
2:13). The "for" in @Heb
6:4 refers to this:I say, if God permit, for
there are cases where God does not permit, for example,
"it is impossible," &c. Without God's blessing, the
cultivation of the ground does not succeed (@Heb
6:7).
4. We must "go on toward
perfection"; for if we fall away, after having
received enlightenment, it will be impossible to renew
us again to repentance.
for those--"in the case of those."
once enlightened--once for all illuminated by
the word of God taught in connection with "baptism" (to
which, in @Heb
6:2, as once for all done," once enlightened" here
answers); compare @Eph
5:26. This passage probably originated the application
of the term "illumination" to baptism in subsequent times.
Illumination, however, was not supposed to be the
inseparable accompaniment of baptism: thus CHRYSOSTOM
says, "Heretics have baptism, not illumination:
they are baptized in body, but not enlightened in soul: as
Simon Magus was baptized, but not illuminated." That
"enlightened" here means knowledge of the word of
truth, appears from comparing the same Greek
word "illuminated," @Heb
10:32, with @Heb
10:26, where "knowledge of the truth" answers to it.
tasted of the heavenly gift--tasted for
themselves. As "enlightened" refers to the sense of
sight: so here taste follows. "The heavenly
gift"; Christ given by the Father and revealed by
the enlightening word preached and written: as conferring
peace in the remission of sins; and as the Bestower of the
gift of the Holy Spirit (@Ac
8:19,20),
made partakers of the Holy Ghost--specified
as distinct from, though so inseparably connected with,
"enlightened," and "tasted of the heavenly gift," Christ,
as answering to "laying on of hands" after baptism, which
was then generally accompanied with the impartation of
the Holy Ghost in miraculous
gifts.
5. tasted the good word of God--distinct
from "tasted OF
(genitive) the heavenly gift"; we do not yet enjoy all
the fulness of Christ, but only have a taste
OF Him, the heavenly
gift now; but believers may taste the whole word
(accusative case) of God already, namely, God's "good word
of promise." The Old Testament promise of Canaan to
Israel typified "the good word of God's" promise of the
heavenly rest (@Heb
4:1-16). Therefore, there immediately follows the
clause, "the powers of the world to come." As
"enlightening" and "tasting of the heavenly gift," Christ,
the Bread of Life, answers to FAITH:
so "made partakers of the Holy Ghost," to
CHARITY, which is
the first-fruit of the Spirit: and "tasted the good word
of God, and the powers of the world to come," to
HOPE. Thus
the triad of privileges answers to the Trinity, the
Father, Son, and Spirit, in their respective works toward
us. "The world to come," is the Christian dispensation,
viewed especially in its future glories, though
already begun in grace here. The world to come thus
stands in contrast to course of this world,
altogether disorganized because God is not its spring of
action and end. By faith, Christians make the world to
come a present reality, though but a foretaste of the
perfect future. The powers of this new spiritual world,
partly exhibited in outward miracles at that time, and
then, as now, especially consisting in the Spirit's inward
quickening influences are the earnest of the coming
inheritance above, and lead the believer who gives himself
up to the Spirit to seek to live as the angels, to sit
with Christ in heavenly places, to set the affections on
things above, and not on things on earth, and to look for
Christ's coming and the full manifestation of the world to
come. This "world to come," in its future aspect, thus
corresponds to "resurrection of the dead and eternal life"
(@Heb
6:2), the first Christian principles which the
Hebrew believers had been taught, by the Christian light
being thrown back on their Old Testament for their
instruction (see on Heb 6:1,2). "The world to come,"
which, as to its "powers," exists already in the redeemed,
will pass into a fully realized fact at Christ's coming (@Col
3:4).
6. If--Greek, "And
(yet) have fallen away"; compare a less extreme
falling or declension, @Ga
5:4, "Ye are fallen from grace." Here an entire and
wilful apostasy is meant; the Hebrews had not yet so
fallen away; but he warns them that such would be the
final result of retrogression, if, instead of "going on to
perfection," they should need to learn again the first
principles of Christianity (@Heb
6:1).
to renew them again--They have been "once" (@Heb
6:4) already renewed, or made anew, and now
they need to be "renewed" over "again."
crucify to themselves the Son of God--"are
crucifiying to themselves" Christ, instead of, like
Paul, crucifying the world unto them by the cross of
Christ (@Ga
6:14). So in @Heb
10:29, "trodden under foot the Son of God, and counted
the blood of the covenant, wherewith . . . sanctified, an
unholy thing." "The Son of God," marking His dignity,
shows the greatness of their offense.
put him to an open shame--literally, "make a
public example of" Him, as if He were a malefactor
suspended on a tree. What the carnal Israel did outwardly,
those who fall away from light do inwardly, they virtually
crucify again the Son of God; "they tear him out of the
recesses of their hearts where He had fixed His abode and
exhibit Him to the open scoffs of the world as something
powerless and common" [BLEEK
in ALFORD].
The Montanists and Novatians used this passage to justify
the lasting exclusion from the Church of those who had
once lapsed. The Catholic Church always opposed this view,
and readmitted the lapsed on their repentance, but did not
rebaptize them. This passage implies that persons may be
in some sense "renewed," and yet fall away finally; for
the words, "renew again," imply that they have
been, in some sense, not the full sense,
ONCE RENEWED
by the Holy Ghost; but certainly not that they are "the
elect," for these can never fall away, being chosen unto
everlasting life (@Joh
10:28). The elect abide in Christ, hear and
continuously obey His voice, and do not fall away. He who
abides not in Christ, is cast forth as a withered branch;
but he who abides in Him becomes more and more free from
sin; the wicked one cannot touch him; and he by faith
overcomes the world. A temporary faith is possible,
without one thereby being constituted one of the elect (@Mr
4:16,17). At the same time it does not limit God's
grace, as if it were "impossible" for God to
reclaim even such a hardened rebel so as yet to look on
Him whom he has pierced. The impossibility rests in their
having known in themselves once the power of Christ's
sacrifice, and yet now rejecting it; there cannot
possibly be any new means devised for their renewal
afresh, and the means provided by God's love they now,
after experience of them, deliberately .and continuously
reject; their conscience being served, and they "twice
dead" (@Jude
1:12), are now past hope, except by a miracle of God's
grace. "It is the curse of evil eternally to propagate
evil" [THOLUCK].
"He who is led into the whole (?) compass of Christian
experiences, may yet cease to abide in them; he who abides
not in them, was, at the very time when he had those
objective experiences, not subjectively true to
them; otherwise there would have been fulfilled in him,
"Whosoever hath, to him shall be given, and he shall have
more abundance" (@Mt
13:12), so that he would have abided in them and not
have fallen away" [THOLUCK].
Such a one was never truly a Spirit-led disciple of Christ
(@Ro
8:14-17). The sin against the Holy Ghost, though
somewhat similar, is not identical with this sin; for
that sin may be committed by those outside the
Church (as in @Mt
12:24,31,32); this, only by those
inside.
7. the earth--rather as
Greek (no article), "land."
which drinketh in--Greek, "which
has drunk in"; not merely receiving it on the surface.
Answering to those who have enjoyed the privilege of
Christian experiences, being in some sense renewed by the
Holy Ghost; true alike of those who persevere and those
who "fall away."
the rain that cometh oft upon it--not merely
failing over it, or towards it, but falling
and resting upon it so as to cover it (the
Greek genitive, not the accusative). The "oft"
implies, on God's part, the riches of His abounding grace
("coming" spontaneously, and often); and, on the
apostate's part, the wilful perversity whereby he has done
continual despite to the oft-repeated motions of the
Spirit. Compare "How often," @Mt
23:37. The rain of heaven falls both on the elect and
the apostates.
bringeth forth--as the natural result
of "having drunk in the rain." See above.
herbs--provender.
meet--fit. Such as the master of the soil
wishes. The opposite of "rejected," @Heb
6:8.
by whom--rather as Greek, "for (that
is, on account of) whom," namely, the lords of the soil;
not the laborers, as English Version, namely, God
and His Christ (@1Co
3:9). The heart of man is the earth; man is the
dresser; herbs are brought forth meet, not for the
dresser, by whom, but for God, the owner of the soil, for
whom it is dressed. The plural is general, the owners
whoever they may be; here God.
receiveth--"partaketh of."
blessing--fruitfulness. Contrast God's curse
causing unfruitfulness (@Ge
3:17,18); also spiritually (@Jer
17:5-8).
from God--Man's use of means is vain unless
God bless (@1Co
3:6,7).
8. that which--rather as
Greek (no article), "But if it (the 'land,' @Heb
6:7) bear"; not so favorable a word as "bringeth
forth," @Heb
6:7, said of the good soil.
briers--Greek, "thistles."
rejected--after having been tested; so
the Greek implies. Reprobate . . . rejected
by the Lord.
nigh unto cursing--on the verge of being
given up to its own barrenness by the just curse of God.
This "nigh" softens the severity of the previous "It is
impossible," &c. (@Heb
6:4,6). The ground is not yet actually cursed.
whose--"of which (land) the end is
unto burning," namely, with the consuming fire of the last
judgment; as the land of Sodom was given to "brimstone,
salt, and burning" (@De
29:23); so as to the ungodly (@Mt
3:10,12 7:19 13:30 Joh 15:6 2Pe 3:10). Jerusalem,
which had so resisted the grace of Christ, was then nigh
unto cursing, and in a few years was burned. Compare @Mt
22:7, "burned up their city" an earnest of a
like fate to all wilful abusers of God's grace (@Heb
10:26,27).
9. beloved--appositely here
introduced; LOVE
to you prompts me in the strong warnings I have just
given, not that I entertain unfavorable thoughts of you;
nay, I anticipate better things of you; Greek
"the things which are better"; that ye are not
thorn-bearing, or nigh unto cursing, and doomed
unto burning, but heirs of salvation in
accordance with God's faithfulness (@Heb
6:10).
we are persuaded--on good grounds; the result
of proof. Compare @Ro
15:14, "I myself am persuaded of you, my brethren,
that ye are full of goodness." A confirmation of
the Pauline authorship of this Epistle.
things that accompany--Greek, "things
that hold by," that is, are close unto "salvation." Things
that are linked unto salvation (compare @Heb
6:19). In opposition to "nigh unto cursing."
though--Greek, "if even we thus
speak." "For it is better to make you afraid with words,
that ye may not suffer in fact."
10. not unrighteous--not
unfaithful to His own gracious promise. Not that we
have any inherent right to claim reward; for (1) a
servant has no merit, as he only does that which is
his bounden duty; (2) our best performances bear no
proportion to what we leave undone; (3) all strength comes
from God; but God has promised of His own grace to
reward the good works of His people (already accepted
through faith in Christ); it is His promise, not
our merits, which would make it unrighteous were He
not to reward His people's works. God will be no man's
debtor.
your work--your whole Christian life of
active obedience.
labour of love--The oldest manuscripts omit
"labor of," which probably crept in from @1Th
1:3. As "love" occurs here, so "hope," @Heb
6:11, "faith," @Heb
6:12; as in @1Co
13:13: the Pauline triad. By their love
he sharpens their hope and faith.
ye have showed--(Compare @Heb
10:32-34).
toward his name--Your acts of love to
the saints were done for His name's sake. The distressed
condition of the Palestinian Christians appears from the
collection for them. Though receiving bounty from other
churches, and therefore not able to minister much by
pecuniary help, yet those somewhat better off could
minister to the greatest sufferers in their Church in
various other ways (compare @2Ti
1:18). Paul, as elsewhere, gives them the utmost
credit for their graces, while delicately hinting the need
of perseverance, a lack of which had probably somewhat
begun to show itself.
11. And--Greek,
"But."
desire--Greek, "earnestly
desire." The language of fatherly affection, rather than
command.
every one of you--implying that all in
the Palestinian churches had not shown the same diligence
as some of those whom he praises in @Heb
6:10. "He cares alike for great and small, and
overlooks none." "Every one of them," even those diligent
in acts of LOVE
(@Heb
6:10), needed to be stimulated to persevere in
the same diligence with a view to the full assurance of
HOPE unto the end. They needed, besides love, patient
perseverance, resting on hope and faith (@Heb
10:36 13:7). Compare "the full assurance of faith," @Heb
10:22 Ro 4:21 1Th 1:5.
unto the end--the coming of Christ.
12. be not--Greek,
"become not." In @Heb
5:11, he said, "Ye have become dull (Greek, 'slothful')
of hearing"; here he warns them not to become
"slothful absolutely," namely, also in mind and
deed. He will not become slothful who keeps always the
end in view; hope is the means of ensuring
this.
followers--Greek, "imitators"; so in @Eph
5:1, Greek; @1Co
11:1.
patience--Greek, "long-suffering
endurance." There is the long-suffering patience,
or endurance of love, @1Co
13:4, and that of faith, @Heb
6:15.
them who . . . inherit the promises--Greek,
"who are inheriting," &c.; to whom the promises are
their inheritance. Not that they have actually
entered on the perfect inheritance, which @Heb
11:13,39,40 explicitly denies; though doubtless the
dead in Christ have, in the disembodied soul, a foretaste
of it; but "them (enumerated in @Heb
11:2-40) who in every age have been, are, or shall be,
inheritors of the promises"; of whom Abraham is an
illustrious example (@Heb
6:13).
13. For--confirming the
reasonableness of resting on "the promises" as infallibly
sure, resting as they do on God's oath, by the instance of
Abraham. "He now gives consolation, by the oath of
God's grace, to those whom, in the second, third, and
fourth chapters, he had warned by the oath of God's
'wrath.' The oath of wrath did not primarily extend its
force beyond the wilderness; but the oath of grace is in
force for ever" [BENGEL].
14. multiplying . . . multiply--Hebraism
for superabundantly multiply.
thee--The increase of Abraham's seed is
virtually an increase of himself. The argument here
refers to Abraham himself as an example; therefore
Paul quotes @Ge
22:17, "thee," instead of "thy seed."
15. so--thus relying on the
promise.
16. for confirmation--not
to be joined, as English Version, to "an oath"; but
to "an end" [ALFORD].
I prefer, "The oath is to them, in respect to confirmation
(of one's solemn promise or covenant; as here, God's),
an end of all contradiction (so the Greek is
translated, @Heb
12:3), or "gainsaying." This passage shows: (1) an
oath is sanctioned even in the Christian dispensation as
lawful; (2) that the limits to its use are, that it only
be employed where it can put an end to contradiction in
disputes, and for confirmation of a solemn
promise.
17. Wherein--that is,
Which being the case among men, God, in accommodation
to their manner of confirming covenants, superadded to His
sure word His oath: the "TWO
immutable things" (@Heb
6:18).
willing . . . counsel--Greek, "willing
. . . will"; words akin. Expressing the utmost
benignity [BENGEL].
more abundantly--than had He not sworn. His
word would have been amply enough; but, to make assurance
doubly sure, He "interposed with an oath" (so the Greek).
Literally, He acted as Mediator, coming between
Himself and us; as if He were less, while He swears, than
Himself by whom He swears (for the less among men usually
swear by the greater). Dost thou not yet believe, thou
that hearest the promise? [BENGEL].
heirs of promise--not only Abraham's literal,
but also his spiritual, seed (@Ga
3:29).
18. immutable--Translate,
as in @Heb
6:17, "unchangeable."
impossible . . . to lie--"ever to
lie"; this is the force of the Greek aorist [ALFORD].
His not being able to deny Himself is a proof, not of
weakness, but of strength incomparable.
consolation--under doubts and fears, and so
"encouragement," literally, "exhortation."
fled for refuge--as if from a shipwreck; or,
as one fleeing to one of the six cities of refuge. Kadesh,
that is, holy, implies the holiness of Jesus, our
Refuge. Shechem, that is, shoulder, the government
is upon his shoulder (@Isa
9:6). Hebron, that is, fellowship, believers
are called into the fellowship of Christ. Bezer, that is,
a fortress, Christ is so to all who trust in Him.
Ramoth, that is, high, for Him hath God exalted
with His right hand (@Ac
5:31). Golan, that is, joy, for in Him all the
saints are justified and shall glory.
lay hold upon the hope--that is, the object
of our hope, as upon a preservative from sinking.
set before us--as a prize for which we
strive; a new image, namely, the race course (@Heb
12:1,2).
19. Hope is found
represented on coins by an anchor.
sure and steadfast--sure in respect to
us: steadfast, or "firm" [ALFORD],
in itself. Not such an anchor as will not
keep the vessel from tossing, or an anchor unsound or too
light [THEOPHYLACT].
which entereth into that--that is the place
within the veil--two images beautifully
combined: (1) The soul is the ship: the
world the sea: the bliss beyond the
world, the distant coast; the hope resting
on faith, the anchor which prevents the vessel
being tossed to and fro; the encouraging consolation
through the promise and oath of God, the
cable connecting the ship and anchor. (2) The world is the
fore-court: heaven, the Holy of Holies; Christ, the High
Priest going before us. so as to enable us, after Him. and
through Him, to enter within the veil. ESTIUS
explains, As the anchor does not stay in the waters, but
enters the ground hidden beneath the waters, and fastens
itself in it, so hope, our anchor of the soul, is not
satisfied with merely coming to the vestibule, that is..is
not content with merely earthly and visible goods, but
penetrates even to those which are within the veil,
namely. to the Holy of Holies. where it lays hold on God
Himself. and heavenly goods. and fastens on them. "Hope,
entering within heaven, hath made us already to be in the
things promised to us, even while we are still below. and
have not yet received them; such strength hone has. as to
make those that are earthly to become heavenly." "The soul
clings, as one in fear of shipwreck to an anchor, and sees
not whither the cable of the anchor runs--where it is
fastened: but she knows that it is fastened behind the
veil which hides the future glory."
veil--Greek, "catapetasma": the
second veil which shut in the Holiest Place. The
outer veil was called by a distinct Greek term,
calumma: "the second (that is, the inner) veil."
20. The absence of the
Greek article requires ALFORD'S
translation, "Where. As forerunner for us (that is, in our
behalf), entered Jesus" [and is now: this last
clause is implied in the 'where' of the Greek,
which implies being IN
a place: 'whither' is understood to 'entered,' taken out
of 'where'; whither Jesus entered, and where
He is now]. The "for us" implies that it was not for
Himself. as God, He needed to enter there, but as our High
Priest, representing and introducing us, His followers,
opening the way to us, by His intercession with the
Father. as the Aaronic high priest entered the Holiest
Place once a year to make propitiation for the people. The
first-fruits of our nature are ascended, and so the rest
is sanctified. Christ's ascension is our promotion: and
whither the glory of the Head has preceded. thither the
hope of the body, too, is called. We ought to keep festal
day, since Christ has taken up and set in the heavens the
first-fruit of our lump, that is, the human flesh [CHRYSOSTOM].
As John Baptist was Christ's forerunner on earth, so
Christ is ours in heaven.
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