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THE EPISTLE OF
PAUL THE APOSTLE TO THE
HEBREWS
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
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CHAPTER 7
@Heb
7:1-28. CHRIST'S
HIGH PRIESTHOOD
AFTER THE ORDER
OF MELCHISEDEC
SUPERIOR TO AARON'S.
1. this Melchisedec--(@Heb
6:20 Ps 110:4). The verb does not come till @Heb
7:3, "abideth."
king . . . priest--Christ unites these
offices in their highest sense, and so restores the
patriarchal union of these offices.
Salem--Jerusalem, that is, seeing peace;
others make Salem distinct, and to be that mentioned (@Ge
33:18 Joh 3:23).
the most high God--called also "Possessor of
heaven and earth" (@Ge
14:19,22). This title of God, "the Most High," handed
down by tradition from the primitive revelation, appears
in the Phoenician god "Elion," that is, Most High.
It is used to imply that the God whom Melchisedec served
is THE TRUE GOD,
and not one of the gods of the nations around. So it is
used in the only other cases in which it is found in the
New Testament, namely in the address of the demoniac, and
the divining damsel constrained to confess that her own
gods were false, and God the only true God.
who met Abraham--in company with the king of
Sodom (@Ge
14:17,18).
slaughter--perhaps defeat, as ALFORD
translates. So @Ge
14:17 (compare @Ge
14:15) may be translated. Arioch, king of Ellasar,
lived and reigned after the disaster [BENGEL].
However, if Chedorlaomer and Amraphel and Tidal were
slain, though Arioch survived, "slaughter of the
kings" would be correct.
blessed him--As priest he first blessed
Abraham on God's part; next he blessed God on Abraham's
part: a reciprocal blessing. Not a mere wish, but an
authoritative and efficacious intercession as a priest.
The Most High God's prerogative as "Possessor of heaven
and earth," is made over to Abraham; and Abraham's glory,
from his victory over the foe, is made over to God. A
blessed exchange for Abraham (@Ge
14:19,20).
2. gave--Greek,
"apportioned"; assigned as his portion.
tenth . . . of all--namely, the booty taken.
The tithes given are closely associated with the
priesthood: the mediating priest received them as a pledge
of the giver's whole property being God's; and as he
conveyed God's gifts to man (@Heb
7:1, "blessed him"), so also man's gifts to God.
Melchisedec is a sample of how God preserves, amidst
general apostasy, an elect remnant. The meeting of
Melchisedec and Abraham is the connecting link between to
two dispensations, the patriarchal, represented by
Melchisedec, who seems to have been specially
consecrated by God as a
KING-PRIEST, the highest form of
that primitive system in which each father of a household
was priest in it, and the Levitical, represented by
Abraham, in which the priesthood was to be limited to one
family of one tribe and one nation. The Levitical was
parenthetical, and severed the kingdom and priesthood; the
patriarchal was the true forerunner of Christ's, which,
like Melchisedec's, unites the kingship and priesthood,
and is not derived from other man, or transmitted to other
man; but derived from God, and is transmitted in God to a
never-ending perpetuity. Melchisedec's priesthood
continueth in Christ for ever. For other points of
superiority, see @Heb
7:16-21. Melchisedec must have had some special
consecration above the other patriarchs, as Abraham, who
also exercised the priesthood; else Abraham would not have
paid tithe to him as to a superior. His peculiar function
seems to have been, by God's special call,
KING-priest
whereas no other "patriarch-priest" was also a
God-consecrated king.
first being--Paul begins the mystical
explanation of the historical fact (allegorical
explanations being familiar to JEWS), by mentioning the
significancy of the name.
righteousness--not merely righteous: so
Christ. Hebrew "Malchi" means king: "Tzedek,"
righteousness.
King of Salem--not only his own name, but
that of the city which he ruled, had a typical
significance, namely, peace. Christ is the true
Prince of peace. The peace which He brings is
the fruit of righteousness.
3. Without father,
&c.--explained by "without genealogy" (so the Greek
is for "without descent); compare @Heb
7:6, that is, his genealogy is not known,
whereas a Levitical priest could not dispense with the
proof of his descent.
having neither beginning of days nor end of life--namely,
history not having recorded his beginning nor end, as it
has the beginning and end of Aaron. The Greek idiom
expressed by "without father," &c. one whose parentage was
humble or unknown. "Days" mean his time of
discharging his function. So the eternity spoken of
in @Ps
110:4 is that of the priestly office chiefly.
made like--It is not said that he was
asbsolutely "like." Made like, namely, in the
particulars here specified. Nothing is said in Genesis of
the end of his priesthood, or of his having had in his
priesthood either predecessor or successor, which, in a
typical point of view, represents Christ's eternal
priesthood, without beginning or end. Aaron's end
is recorded; Melchisedec's not: typically significant.
"The Son of God" is not said to be made like unto
Melchisedec, but Melchisedec to be "made like the Son of
God." When ALFORD
denies that Melchisedec was made like the Son of God in
respect of his priesthood, on the ground that
Melchisedec was prior in time to our Lord, he
forgets that Christ's eternal priesthood was an archetypal
reality in God's purpose from everlasting, to which
Melchisedec's priesthood was "made like" in due time. The
Son of God is the more ancient, and is the archetype:
compare @Heb
8:5, where the heavenly things are represented as the
primary archetype of the Levitical ordinances. The
epithets, "without father," &c. "beginning of days, "nor
end," "abideth continually," belong to Melchisedec only
in respect to his priesthood, and in so far as he
is the type of the Son of God, and are strictly true
of Him alone. Melchisedec was, in his priesthood, "made
like" Christ, as far as the imperfect type could represent
the lineaments of the perfect archetype. "The portrait of
a living man can be seen on the canvas, yet the man is
very different from his picture." There is nothing in the
account, @Ge
14:18-20, to mark Melchisedec as a superhuman being:
he is classed with the other kings in the chapter as a
living historic personage: not as ORIGEN
thought, an angel; nor as the Jews thought, Shem, son of
Noah; nor as CALMET,
Enoch; nor as the Melchisedekites, that he was the Holy
Ghost; nor as others, the Divine Word. He was probably of
Shemitic, not Canaanite origin: the last independent
representative of the original Shemitic population, which
had been vanquished by the Canaanites, Ham's descendants.
The greatness of Abraham then lay in hopes; of Melchisedec,
in present possession. Melchisedec was the highest and
last representative of the Noahic covenant, as Christ was
the highest and ever enduring representative of the
Abrahamic. Melchisedec, like Christ, unites in himself the
kingly and priestly offices, which Abraham does
not. ALFORD
thinks the epithets are, in some sense, strictly true of
Melchisedec himself; not merely in the typical
sense given above; but that he had not, as mortal men
have, a beginning or end of life (?). A very improbable
theory, and only to be resorted to in the last extremity,
which has no place here. With Melchisedec, whose
priesthood probably lasted a long period, the priesthood
and worship of the true God in Canaan ceased. He was first
and last king-priest there, till Christ, the
antitype; and therefore his priesthood is said to last for
ever, because it both lasts a long time, and lasts as long
as the nature of the thing itself (namely, his life, and
the continuance of God's worship in Canaan) admits. If
Melchisedec were high priest for ever in a literal sense,
then Christ and he would now still be high priests, and we
should have two instead of one (!). THOLUCK
remarks, "Melchisedec remains in so far as the type
remains in the antitype, in so far as his priesthood
remains in Christ." The father and mother of
Melchisedec, as also his children, are not descended from
Levi, as the Levitical priests (@Heb
7:6) were required to be, and are not even mentioned
by Moses. The wife of Aaron, Elisheba, the mother
from whom the Levitical priests spring, is mentioned: as
also Sarah, the original mother of the Jewish nation
itself. As man, Christ had no father; as God,
no mother.
4. consider--not merely
see, but weigh with attentive contemplation,
the fact.
even--"to whom (as his superior) Abraham
even paid tithe (went so far as to pay tithe) of
(consisting of, literally, 'from') the best of the
spoils (literally, 'the top of the heap"; whether of
corn, the first-fruits of which, taken from the top, used
to be consecrated to God; or of spoils, from the top of
which the general used to take some portion for
consecration to God, or for his own use)." He paid "tithes
of ALL," and
those tithes were taken out of the topmost and best
portion of the whole spoils.
the patriarch--in the Greek
emphatically standing at the end of the whole sentence:
And this payer of tithe being no less a personage than
"the patriarch," the first forefather and head of our
Jewish race and nation See on
Heb 7:3, on Melchisedec's superiority as specially
consecrated king-priest, above the other
patriarch-priests.
5. sons of Levi--namely,
those alone who belonged to the family of Aaron, to whom
the priesthood was restricted. Tithes originally paid to
the whole tribe of Levi, became at length attached to the
priesthood.
according to the law--sanctioned by Jehovah
(@Heb
9:19).
of their brethren--with whom, in point of
natural descent, they are on a level.
though, &c.--Though thus on a level by common
descent from Abraham, they yet pay tithe to the Levites,
whose brethren they are. Now the Levites are subordinate
to the priests; and these again to Abraham, their common
progenitor; and Abraham to Melchisedec. "How great" (@Heb
7:4) then, must this Melchisedec be in respect to his
priesthood, as compared with the Levitical, though the
latter received tithes! and now unspeakably great must
"the Son of God" be, to whom, as the sacerdotal archetype
(in God's purpose), Melchisedec was made like! Thus
compare the "consider," @Heb
7:4, in the case of Melchisedec, the type, with the
"consider" (Greek, "contemplate attentively," see
on Heb 3:1, a stronger word than here) in the case of
Christ, the archetype.
6. he whose descent is not
counted from them--not from "the sons of Levi," as
those "who receive the priesthood." This verse explains
"without descent" (Greek, "genealogy" in both
verses, @Heb
7:3). He who needs not, as the Levitical priests, to
be able to trace his genealogy back to Levi.
received--Greek, "hath received
tithes."
blessed--Greek, "hath blessed."
The perfect tense implies that the significance of the
fact endures to the present time.
him that had--"the possessor of the
promises," Abraham's peculiar distinction and designation.
Paul exalts Abraham in order still more to exalt
Melchisedec. When Christ is the subject, the singular
"promise" is used. "The promises" in the plural, refer to
God's promise of greatness to himself and his seed, and of
the possession of Canaan, twice repeated before the
blessing of Melchisedec. As the priests, though above the
people (@Heb
7:7) whom it was their duty to "bless," were yet
subordinate to Abraham; and as Abraham was subordinate to
Melchisedec, who blessed him, Melchisedec must be much
above the Levitical priests.
7. The principle that the
blesser is superior to him whom he blesses, holds good
only in a blessing given with divine authority; not merely
a prayerful wish, but one that is divinely efficient in
working its purport, as that of the patriarchs on their
children: so Christ's blessing, @Lu
24:51 Ac 3:26.
8. Second point of
superiority: Melchisedec's is an enduring, the
Levitical a transitory, priesthood. As the law was
a parenthesis between Abraham's dispensation of
promise of grace, and its enduring fulfilment at Christ's
coming (@Ro
5:20, Greek, "The law entered as something
adscititious and by the way"): so the Levitical priesthood
was parenthetical and temporary, between Melchisedec's
typically enduring priesthood, and its antitypical
realization in our ever continuing High Priest, Christ.
here--in the Levitical priesthood.
there--in the priesthood after the order
of Melchisedec. In order to bring out the typical
parallel more strongly, Paul substitutes, "He of whom it
is witnessed that he liveth," for the more untypical, "He
who is made like to Him that liveth." Melchisedec "liveth"
merely in his official capacity, his priesthood
being continued in Christ. Christ, on the other hand, is,
in His own person, "ever living after the power of
an endless life" (@Heb
7:16,25). Melchisedec's death not being recorded, is
expressed by the positive term "liveth," for the sake of
bringing into prominence the antitype, Christ, of whom
alone it is strictly and perfectly true, "that He liveth."
9. as I may so say--to
preclude what he is about to say being taken in the mere
literal sense; I may say that, virtually,
Levi, in the person of his father Abraham, acknowledged
Melchisedec's superiority, and paid tithes to him.
who receiveth tithes--(Compare @Heb
7:5).
in Abraham--Greek, "by means of (by
the hand of) Abraham"; through Abraham. "Paid tithes,"
literally, "hath been tithed," that is, been taken tithes
of.
10. in the loins of his father--that
is, forefather Abraham. Christ did not, in
this sense, pay tithes in Abraham, for He never was in the
loins of an earthly father [ALFORD].
Though, in respect to His mother, He was "of the fruit of
(David's, and so of) Abraham's loins," yet, being
supernaturally, without human father, conceived, as He is
above the natural law of birth, so is he above the law of
tithes. Only those born in the natural way, and so in sin,
being under the curse, needed to pay tithe to the priest,
that he might make propitiation for their sin. Not so
Christ, who derived only His flesh, not also the taint of
the flesh, from Abraham. BENGEL.
remarks, The blessings which Abraham had before
meeting Melchisedec were the general promises, and
the special one of a natural seed, and so of Levi;
but the promises under which Christ was
comprehended, and the faith for which Abraham was so
commended, followed after Abraham's meeting
Melchisedec, and being blessed by him: to which
fact. @Ge
15:1, "After these things," calls our
attention. This explains why Christ, the supernatural
seed, is not included as paying tithes through Abraham to
Melchisedec.
11. perfection--absolute:
"the bringing of man to his highest state, namely, that of
salvation and sanctification."
under it--The reading in the oldest
manuscripts is, "Upon it (that is, on the ground of
it as the basis, the priest having to administer the law,
@Mal
2:7: it being presupposed) the people (@Heb
9:19, 'all the people') have received the law
(the Greek is perfect, not aorist tense;
implying the people were still observing the law)."
what further need--(@Heb
8:7). For God does nothing needless.
another--rather as Greek, "that a
different priest (one of a different order) should
arise (anew, @Heb
7:15).
not be called--Greek, "not be said
(to be) after the order of Aaron," that is, that, when
spoken of in the @Ps
110:4, "He is not said to be (as we should expect, if
the Aaronic priesthood was perfect) after the order of
Aaron."
12. For--the reason why
Paul presses the words "after the order of Melchisedec" in
@Ps
110:4, namely, because these presuppose a change or
transference of the priesthood, and this carries with it a
change also of the law (which is inseparably bound up with
the priesthood, both stand and fall together, @Heb
7:11). This is his answer to those who might object,
What need was there of a new covenant?
13. Confirming the truth
that a change is made of the law (@Heb
7:12), by another fact showing the distinctness of the
new priesthood from the Aaronic.
these things--(@Ps
110:4).
pertaineth--Greek, "hath partaken of"
(the perfect tense implies the continuance still of
His manhood).
another--"a different tribe" from that
of Levi.
14. evident--literally,
"manifest before the eyes" as a thing indisputable; a
proof that whatever difficulties may now appear, then
Jesus Christ's genealogy labored under none.
our Lord--the only place where this now
common title occurs without "Jesus," or "Christ," except @2Pe
3:15.
sprang--as a plant, and a branch.
Judah--@Ge
49:10 Lu 1:27,39 (Hebron of Judah, where LIGHTFOOT
thinks Jesus was conceived) @Lu
2:4,5 Re 5:5.
of which tribe . . . priesthood--"in
respect to which tribe Moses spake nothing concerning
priests" (so the oldest manuscripts read, nothing to imply
that priests were to be taken from it).
15. Another proof that the
law, or economy, is changed, namely, forasmuch as Christ
is appointed Priest, "not according to the law of a carnal
(that is, a mere outward) commandment," but
"according to the power of an indissoluble (so the
Greek) life." The hundred tenth Psalm appoints Him
"for ever" (@Heb
7:17). The Levitical law required a definite carnal
descent. In contrast stands "the power"; Christ's
spiritual, inward, living power of overcoming death. Not
agreeably to a statute is Christ appointed, but
according to an inward living power.
it--the change of the law or economy, the
statement (@Heb
7:12,18).
far more--Greek, "more abundantly."
for that--"seeing that," literally, "if"; so
@Ro
5:10.
after the similitude of Melchisedec--answering
to "after the order of Melchisedec" (@Heb
5:10). The "order" cannot mean a series of priests,
for Melchisedec neither received his priesthood from, nor
transmitted it to, any other mere man; it must mean
"answering to the office of Melchisedec." Christ's
priesthood is similar to Melchisedec's in that it is "for
ever" (@Heb
7:16,17).
another--rather as Greek, "a
different."
16. carnal . . . endless--mutually
contrasted. As "form" and "power" are opposed, @2Ti
3:5; so here "the law" and "power," compare @Ro
8:3, "The law was weak through the flesh"; and
@Heb
7:18, "weakness." "The law" is here not the law in
general, but the statute as to the priesthood.
"Carnal," as being only outward and temporary, is
contrasted with "endless," or, as Greek,
"indissoluble." Commandments is contrasted with "life."
The law can give a commandment, but it
cannot give life (@Heb
7:19). But our High Priest's inherent "power," now in
heaven, has in Him "life for ever"; @Heb
9:14, "through the eternal Spirit"; @Heb
7:25, "able . . . ever liveth" (@Joh
5:26). It is in the power of His resurrection life,
not of His earthly life, that Christ officiates as a
Priest.
17. For--proving His
life to be "endless" or indissoluble (@Heb
7:16). The emphasis is on "for ever." The oldest
manuscripts read, "He is testified of, that Thou
art," &c.
18. there is--Greek,
"there takes place," according to @Ps
110:4.
disannuling--a repealing.
of the commandment--ordaining the Levitical
priesthood. And, as the Levitical priesthood and the law
are inseparably joined, since the former is repealed, the
latter is so also (see on
Heb 7:11).
going before--the legal ordinance introducing
and giving place to the Christian, the antitypical and
permanent end of the former.
weakness and unprofitableness--The opposite
of "power" (@Heb
7:16).
19. For, &c.--justifying
his calling the law weak and unprofitable (@Heb
7:18). The law could not bring men to: true
justification or sanctification before God, which is the
"perfection" that we all need in order to be accepted of
Him, and which we have in Christ.
nothing--not merely "no one," but "nothing."
The law brought nothing to its perfected end; everything
in it was introductory to its antitype in the Christian
economy, which realizes the perfection contemplated;
compare "unprofitableness," @Heb
7:18.
did--rather connect with @Heb
7:18, thus, "There takes place (by virtue of @Ps
110:4) a repealing of the commandment (on the one
hand), but (on the other) a bringing in afterwards
(the Greek expresses that there is a bringing in of
something over and above the law; a
superinducing, or accession of something new,
namely, something better than the good things which the
pre-existing law promised [WAHL])
of a better hope," not one weak and unprofitable, but, as
elsewhere the Christian dispensation is called,
"everlasting," "true," "the second," "more excellent,"
"different," "living," "new," "to come," "perfect."
Compare @Heb
8:6, bringing us near to God, now in spirit,
hereafter both in spirit and in body.
we draw nigh unto God--the sure token of
"perfection." Weakness is the opposite of this
filial confidence of access. The access through the legal
sacrifices was only symbolical and through the medium of a
priest; that through Christ is immediate, perfect, and
spiritual.
20. Another proof of the
superiority of Christ's Melchisedec-like priesthood; the
oath of God gave a solemn weight to it which was not in
the law-priesthood, which was not so confirmed.
he was made priest--rather supply from
@Heb
7:22, which completes the sentence begun in this
verse, @Heb
7:21 being a parenthesis, "inasmuch as not without an
oath He was made surety of the testament (for . . .
), of so much better a testament hath Jesus been made the
surety."
21. Translate in the
Greek order, "For they indeed (the existing legal
priests) without the (solemn) promise on oath (so
the Greek [TITTMANN])
are made priests."
by him--God.
unto him--the Lord, the Son of God (@Ps
110:1).
not repent--never change His purpose.
after the order of Melchisedec--omitted in
some oldest manuscripts, contained in others.
22. surety--ensuring in His
own person the certainty of the covenant to us. This He
did by becoming responsible for our guilt, by sealing the
covenant with His blood, and by being openly acknowledged
as our triumphant Saviour by the Father, who raised Him
from the dead. Thus He is at once God's surety for man,
and man's surety for God, and so Mediator between God and
man (@Heb
8:6).
better--@Heb
8:6 13:20, "everlasting."
testament--sometimes translated, "covenant."
The Greek term implies that it is appointed
by God, and comprises the relations and bearings partly of
a covenant, partly of a testament: (1) the
appointment made without the concurrence of a second
party, of somewhat concerning that second party; a last
will or testament, so in @Heb
9:16,17; (2) a mutual agreement in which both parties
consent.
23. Another proof of
superiority; the Levitical priests were many, as death
caused the need of continually new ones being appointed in
succession. Christ dies not, and so hath a priesthood
which passes not from one to another.
were--Greek, "are made."
many--one after another; opposed to His "unchangeable
(that does not pass from one to another) priesthood" (@Heb
7:24).
not suffered to continue--Greek, "hindered
from permanently continuing," namely,
in the priesthood.
24. he--emphatic; Greek,
"Himself." So in @Ps
110:4, "THOU art a priest"; singular, not
priests, "many."
continueth--Greek, simple verb, not
the compound as in @Heb
7:23. "Remaineth," namely, in life.
unchangeable--Greek, "hath His
priesthood unchangeable"; not passing from one to
another, intransmissible. Therefore no earthly
so-called apostolic succession of priests are His
vicegerents. The Jewish priests had successors in
office, because "they could not continue by reason of
death." But this Man, because He liveth ever, hath no
successor in office, not even Peter (@1Pe
5:1).
25. Wherefore--Greek,
"Whence"; inasmuch as "He remaineth for ever."
also--as a natural consequence flowing from
the last, at the same time a new and higher thing
[ALFORD].
save--His very name JESUS
(@Heb
7:22) meaning Saviour.
to the uttermost--altogether, perfectly, so
that nothing should be wanting afterwards for ever [TITTMANN].
It means "in any wise," "utterly," in @Lu
13:11.
come unto God--by faith.
by him--through Him as their mediating
Priest, instead of through the Levitical priests.
seeing he ever liveth--resuming "He
continueth ever," @Heb
7:24; therefore "He is able to the uttermost"; He is
not, like the Levitical priest, prevented by death,
for "He ever liveth" (@Heb
7:23).
to make intercession--There was but the
one offering on earth once for all. But the
intercession for us in the heavens (@Heb
7:26) is ever continuing, whence the result follows,
that we can never be separated from the love of God in
Christ. He intercedes only for those who come unto
God through Him, not for the unbelieving world (@Joh
17:9). As samples of His intercession, compare the
prophetical descriptions in the Old Testament. "By an
humble omnipotency (for it was by His humiliation
that He obtained all power), or omnipotent
humility, appearing in the presence, and presenting His
postulations at the throne of God" [BISHOP
PEARSON]. He
was not only the offering, but the priest who offered it.
Therefore, He has become not only a sacrifice, but an
intercessor; His intercession being founded on His
voluntary offering of Himself without spot to God. We are
not only then in virtue of His sacrifice forgiven, but in
virtue of the intercession admitted to favor and grace [ARCHBISHOP
MAGEE].
26. such--as is above
described. The oldest manuscripts read, "also." "For to us
(as sinners; emphatical) there was also becoming
(besides the other excellencies of our High Priest) such
an High Priest."
holy--"pious" (a distinct Greek word
from that for holy, which latter implies
consecration) towards God; perfectly answering
God's will in reverent piety (@Ps
16:10).
harmless--literally, "free from evil" and
guile, in relation to Himself.
undefiled--not defiled by stain contracted
from others, in relation to men. Temptation, to
which He was exposed, left no trace of evil in Him.
separate--rather, "separated from
sinners," namely, in His heavenly state as our High Priest
above, after He had been parted from the earth, as
the Levitical high priest was separated from the people in
the sanctuary (whence he was not to go out), @Le
21:12. Though justifying through faith the ungodly, He
hath no contact with them as such. He is lifted
above our sinful community, being "made higher than the
heavens," at the same time that He makes believers as
such (not as sinners), "to sit together (with Him) in
heavenly places" (@Eph
2:6). Just as Moses on the mount was separated
from and above the people, and alone with God. This proves
Jesus is GOD.
"Though innumerable lies have been forged against the
venerable Jesus, none dared to charge Him with any
intemperance" [ORIGEN].
made--Jesus was higher before (@Joh
17:5), and as the God-MAN
was made so by the Father after His humiliation
(compare @Heb
1:4).
higher than the heavens--for "He passed
through [so the Greek] the heavens" (@Heb
4:14).
27. daily--"day by day."
The priests daily offered sacrifices (@Heb
9:6 10:11 Ex 29:38-42). The high priests took part in
these daily-offered sacrifices only on festival days; but
as they represented the whole priesthood, the daily
offerings are here attributed to them; their exclusive
function was to offer the atonement "once every year" (@Heb
9:7), and "year by year continually" (@Heb
10:1). The "daily" strictly belongs to Christ,
not to the high priests, "who needeth not daily, as those
high priests (year by year, and their subordinate
priests daily), to offer," &c.
offer up--The Greek term is peculiarly
used of sacrifices for sin. The high priest's
double offering on the day of atonement, the bullock for
himself, and the goat for the people's sins, had its
counterpart in the TWO
lambs offered daily by the ordinary priests.
this he did--not "died first for His own sins
and then the people's," but for the people's only.
The negation is twofold: He needeth not to offer (1)
daily; nor (2) to offer for His own sins also; for He
offered Himself a spotless sacrifice (@Heb
7:26 Heb 4:15). The sinless alone could offer for the
sinful.
once--rather as Greek, "once for all."
The sufficiency of the one sacrifice to atone for
all sins for ever, resulted from its
absolute spotlessness.
28. For--reason for the
difference stated in @Heb
7:27, between His one sacrifice and their oft repeated
sacrifices, namely, because of His entire freedom from the
sinful infirmity to which they are subject. He
needed not, as they, to offer FOR HIS OWN SIN; and
being now exempt from death and "perfected for evermore,"
He needs not to REPEAT His sacrifice.
the word--"the word" confirmed by "the oath."
which--which oath was after the law.
namely, in @Ps
110:4, abrogating the preceding law-priesthood.
the Son--contrasted with "men."
consecrated--Greek, "made perfect"
once for all, as in @Heb
2:10 5:9; see on Heb 2:10; Heb 5:9. Opposed to "having
infirmity." Consecrated as a perfected priest by
His perfected sacrifice, and consequent anointing and
exaltation to the right hand of the Father.
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