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THE EPISTLE OF
PAUL THE APOSTLE TO THE
HEBREWS
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
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CHAPTER 8
@Heb
8:1-13. CHRIST, THE
HIGH PRIEST
IN THE TRUE
SANCTUARY, SUPERSEDING
THE LEVITICAL
PRIESTHOOD; THE
NEW RENDERS
OBSOLETE THE
OLD COVENANT.
1. the sum--rather, "the
principal point"; for the participle is present, not
past, which would be required if the meaning were "the
sum." "The chief point in (or, 'in the case'; so the
Greek, @Heb
9:10,15,17) the things which we are speaking,"
literally, "which are being spoken."
such--so transcendently pre-eminent, namely
in this respect, that "He is set on the right hand of,"
&c. Infinitely above all other priests in this one grand
respect, He exercises His priesthood
IN HEAVEN, not in
the earthly "holiest place" (@Heb
10:12). The Levitical high priests, even when they
entered the Holiest Place once a year, only
STOOD for a brief
space before the symbol of God's throne; but Jesus
SITS on
the throne of the Divine Majesty in the heaven itself,
and this for ever (@Heb
10:11,12).
2. minister--The Greek
term implies priestly ministry in the temple.
the sanctuary--Greek, "the holy
places"; the Holy of Holies. Here the heavenly sanctuary
is meant.
the true--the archetypal and antitypical, as
contrasted with the typical and symbolical (@Heb
9:24). Greek "alethinos" (used here) is
opposed to that which does not fulfil its idea, as for
instance, a type; "alethes," to that which
is untrue and unreal, as a lie. The measure of alethes
is reality; that of alethinos, ideality. In
alethes the idea corresponds to the thing; in
alethinos, the thing to the idea [KALMIS
in ALFORD].
tabernacle--(@Heb
9:11). His body. Through His glorified body as
the tabernacle, Christ passes into the heavenly "Holy of
Holies," the immediate immaterial presence of God, where
He intercedes for us. This tabernacle in which God dwells,
is where God in Christ meets us who are "members of His
body, of His flesh, and of His bones." This tabernacle
answers to the heavenly Jerusalem, where God's visible
presence is to be manifested to His perfected saints and
angels, who are united in Christ the Head; in
contradistinction to His personal invisible
presence in the Holy of Holies unapproachable save to
Christ. @Joh
1:14, "Word . . . dwelt among us," Greek, "tabernacled."
pitched--Greek, "fixed" firmly.
not man--as Moses (@Heb
8:5).
3. For--assigning his
reason for calling him "minister of the sanctuary" (@Heb
8:2).
somewhat--He does not offer again His once
for all completed sacrifice. But as the high priest
did not enter the Holy Place without blood,
so Christ has entered the heavenly Holy Place with His
own blood. That "blood of sprinkling" is in heaven.
And is thence made effectual to sprinkle believers as the
end of their election (@1Pe
1:2). The term "consecrate" as a priest, is literally,
to fill the hand, implying that an offering is
given into the hands of the priest, which it is his duty
to present to God. If a man be a priest, he must have some
gift in his hands to offer. Therefore, Christ, as a
priest, has His blood as His oblation to offer before God.
4. Implying that Christ's
priestly office is exercised in heaven, not in earth; in
the power of His resurrection life, not of His earthly
life.
For--The oldest manuscripts read,
"accordingly then."
if, &c.--"if He were on earth, He would
not even (so the Greek) be a priest" (compare @Heb
7:13,14); therefore, certainly, He could not exercise
the high priestly function in the earthly Holy of Holies.
seeing that, &c.--"since there are" already,
and exist now (the temple service not yet being set aside,
as it was on the destruction of Jerusalem), "those (the
oldest manuscripts omit 'priests') who offer the
(appointed) gifts according to (the) law." Therefore,
His sacerdotal "ministry" must be "in
the heavens," not on earth (@Heb
8:1). "If His priesthood terminated on the earth, He
would not even be a priest at all" [BENGEL].
I conceive that the denial here of Christ's priesthood
on earth does not extend to the sacrifice on the cross
which He offered as a priest on earth; but applies
only to the crowning work of His priesthood, the
bringing of the blood into the Holy of Holies, which
He could not have done in the earthly Holy of
Holies, as not being an Aaronic priest. The place
(the heavenly Holy of Holies) was as essential to the
atonement being made as the oblation (the blood).
The body was burnt without the gate; but the
sanctification was effected by the presentation of the
blood within the sanctuary by the high priest. If on
earth, He would not be a priest in the sense of the law
of Moses ("according to the law" is emphatic).
5. Who--namely, the
priests.
serve unto the example--not "after the
example," as BENGEL
explains. But as in @Heb
13:10, "serve the tabernacle," that is, do it service:
so "serve (the tabernacle which is but) the outline
and shadow." The Greek for "example" is here taken
for the sketch, copy, or suggestive
representation of the heavenly sanctuary, which is the
antitypical reality and primary archetype. "The mount"
answers to heaven, @Heb
12:22.
admonished--The Greek especially
applies to divine responses and commands.
to make--"perfectly": so the Greek.
See--Take heed, accurately observing the
pattern, that so thou mayest make, &c.
saith he--God.
the pattern--an accurate representation,
presented in vision to Moses, of the heavenly real
sanctuary. Thus the earthly tabernacle was copy of a copy;
but the latter accurately representing the grand
archetypical original in heaven (@Ex
25:40).
6. now--not time;
but "as it is."
more excellent ministry--than any earthly
ministry.
by how much--in proportion as.
mediator--coming between us and God, to carry
into effect God's covenant with us. "The messenger (angel)
of the covenant."
which--Greek, "one which" [ALFORD]:
inasmuch as being one which.
established--Greek, "enacted as a
law." So @Ro
3:27, "law of faith"; and @Ro
8:2 9:31, apply "law" to the Gospel covenant. It is
implied hereby, the Gospel is founded on the law, in the
spirit and essence of the latter.
upon--resting upon.
better promises--enumerated @Heb
8:10,11. The Old Testament promises were mainly of
earthly, the New Testament promises, of heavenly
blessings: the exact fulfilment of the earthly promises
was a pledge of the fulfilment of the heavenly. "Like a
physician who prescribes a certain diet to a patient, and
then when the patient is beginning to recover, changes the
diet, permitting what he had before forbidden; or as a
teacher gives his pupil an elementary lesson at first;
preparatory to leading him to a higher stage": so Rabbi
Albo in his Ikkarim. Compare @Jer
7:21,22, which shows that God's original design in the
old covenant ritual system was, that it should be
pedagogical, as a schoolmaster leading and preparing men
for Christ.
7. Same reasoning as in @Heb
7:11.
faultless--perfect in all its parts, so as
not to be found fault with as wanting anything which
ought to be there: answering all the purposes of a law.
The law in its morality was blameless (Greek,
"amomos"); but in saving us it was
defective, and so not faultless (Greek, "amemptos").
should no place have been sought--as it has
to be now; and as it is sought in the prophecy (@Heb
8:8-11). The old covenant would have anticipated all
man's wants, so as to give no occasion for seeking
something more perfectly adequate. Compare on the phrase
"place . . . sought," @Heb
12:17.
8. finding fault with them--the
people of the old covenant, who were not made "faultless"
by it (@Heb
8:7); and whose disregard of God's covenant
made Him to "regard them not" (@Heb
8:9). The law is not in itself blamed, but
the people who had not observed it.
he saith--(@Jer
31:31-34; compare @Eze
11:19 36:25-27). At Rama, the headquarters of
Nebuzar-adan, whither the captives of Jerusalem had been
led, Jeremiah uttered this prophecy of Israel's
restoration under another David, whereby Rachel, wailing
for her lost children, shall be comforted; literally in
part fulfilled at the restoration under Zerubbabel, and
more fully to be hereafter at Israel's return to their own
land; spiritually fulfilled in the Gospel covenant,
whereby God forgives absolutely His people's sins, and
writes His law by His Spirit on the hearts of believers,
the true Israel. "This prophecy forms the third part of
the third trilogy of the three great trilogies into which
Jeremiah's prophecies may be divided: Jeremiah 21-25,
against the shepherds of the people; Jeremiah 26-29,
against the false prophets; Jeremiah 30 and 31, the book
of restoration" [DELITZSCH
in ALFORD].
Behold, the days come--the frequent formula
introducing a Messianic prophecy.
make--Greek, "perfect"; "consummate."
A suitable expression as to the new covenant, which
perfected what the old could not (compare end of @Heb
8:9, with end of @Heb
8:10).
Israel . . . Judah--Therefore, the ten
tribes, as well as Judah, share in the new covenant. As
both shared the exile, so both shall share the literal and
spiritual restoration.
9. Not according to,
&c.--very different from, and far superior to, the old
covenant, which only "worked wrath" (@Ro
4:15) through man's "not regarding" it. The new
covenant enables us to obey by the Spirit's inward impulse
producing love because of the forgiveness of our sins.
made with--rather as Greek, "made to":
the Israelites being only recipients, not coagents [ALFORD]
with God.
I took them by the hand--as a father takes
his child by the hand to support and guide his steps.
"There are three periods: (1) that of the promise; (2)
that of the pedagogical instruction; (3) that of
fulfilment" [BENGEL].
The second, that of the pedagogical pupilage, began at the
exodus from Egypt.
I regarded them not--English Version,
@Jer
31:32, translates, "Although I was an husband unto
them." Paul's translation here is supported by the
Septuagint, Syriac, and GESENIUS,
and accords with the kindred Arabic. The Hebrews
regarded not God, so God, in righteous retribution,
regarded them not. On "continued not in my
covenant," Schelling observes: The law was in fact the
mere ideal of a religious constitution: in
practice, the Jews were throughout, before the
captivity, more or less polytheists, except in the time of
David, and the first years of Solomon (the type of
Messiah's reign). Even after the return from Babylon,
idolatry was succeeded by what was not much better,
formalism and hypocrisy (@Mt
12:43). The law was (1) a typical picture, tracing out
the features of the glorious Gospel to be revealed; (2) it
had a delegated virtue from the Gospel, which ceased,
therefore, when the Gospel came.
10. make with--Greek,
"make unto."
Israel--comprising the before disunited (@Heb
8:8) ten tribes' kingdom, and that of Judah. They are
united in the spiritual Israel, the elect Church, now:
they shall be so in the literal restored kingdom of Israel
to come.
I will put--literally, "(I) giving." This is
the first of the "better promises" (@Heb
8:6).
mind--their intelligent faculty.
in, &c.--rather, "ON their hearts." Not on
tables of stone as the law (@2Co
3:3).
write--Greek, "inscribe."
and I will be to them a God, &c.--fulfilled
first in the outward kingdom of God. Next, in the inward
Gospel kingdom. Thirdly, in the kingdom at once outward
and inward, the spiritual being manifested outwardly (@Re
21:3). Compare a similar progression as to the
priesthood (1) @Ex
19:6; (2) @1Pe
2:5; (3) @Isa
61:6 Re 1:6. This progressive advance of the
significance of the Old Testament institutions, &c., says
THOLUCK,
shows the transparency and prophetic character
which runs throughout the whole.
11. Second of the "better
promises" (@Heb
8:6).
they shall not--"they shall not have to
teach" [ALFORD].
his neighbour--So Vulgate reads; but
the oldest manuscripts have "his (fellow) citizen."
brother--a closer and more endearing relation
than fellow citizen.
from the least to the greatest--Greek,
"from the little one to the great one." @Zec
12:8, "He that is feeble among them shall be as
David." Under the old covenant, the priest's lips were to
keep knowledge, and at his mouth the people were to seek
the law: under the new covenant, the Holy Spirit teaches
every believer. Not that the mutual teaching of brethren
is excluded while the covenant is being promulgated; but
when once the Holy Spirit shall have fully taught all the
remission of their sins and inward sanctification, then
there shall be no further' need of man teaching his fellow
man. Compare @1Th
4:9 5:1, an earnest of that perfect state to come. On
the way to that perfect state every man should teach his
neighbor. "The teaching is not hard and forced, because
grace renders all teachable; for it is not the ministry of
the letter, but of the spirit (@2Co
3:6). The believer's firmness does not depend on the
authority of human teachers. God Himself teaches"
[BENGEL]. The
New Testament is shorter than the Old Testament, because,
instead of the details of an outward letter law, it
gives the all-embracing principles of the spiritual
law written on the conscience, leading one to spontaneous
instinctive obedience in outward details. None save the
Lord can teach effectually, "know the Lord."
12. For, &c.--the third
of "the better promises" (@Heb
8:6). The forgiveness of sins is, and will be,
the root of this new state of inward grace and knowledge
of the Lord. Sin being abolished, sinners obtain grace.
I will be merciful--Greek,
"propitious"; the Hebrew, "salach," is
always used of God only in relation to men.
and their iniquities--not found in
Vulgate, Syriac, Coptic, and one oldest Greek
manuscript; but most oldest manuscripts have the words
(compare @Heb
10:17).
remember no more--Contrast the law, @Heb
10:3.
13. he--God.
made . . . old--"hath (at the time of
speaking the prophecy) antiquated the first covenant."
From the time of God's mention of a
NEW covenant (since
God's words are all realities) the first covenant might be
regarded as ever dwindling away, until its complete
abolition on the actual introduction of the Gospel. Both
covenants cannot exist side by side. Mark how verbal
inspiration is proved in Paul's argument turning wholly on
the one word "NEW"
(covenant), occurring but once in the Old Testament.
that which decayeth--Greek, "that
which is being antiquated," namely, at the time when
Jeremiah spake. For in Paul's time, according to his view,
the new had absolutely set aside the old covenant. The
Greek for (Kaine) New (Testament)
implies that it is of a different kind and
supersedes the old: not merely recent (Greek,
"nea"). Compare @
Ho 3:4,5.
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